The article argues that right-wing media outlets, including Fox News, Newsmax, and One America News Network, played a crucial role in Donald Trump's political success. These outlets fostered an environment where Trump's actions were largely excused, and his opponents were consistently portrayed negatively.
The author points to the frequent appearances of Trump administration officials on Fox News as evidence of a propaganda campaign. Media Matters for America reported that key officials appeared on Fox networks over 500 times in Trump's first 100 days in office, highlighting the close relationship and biased coverage.
The article analyzes Fox News' coverage of Trump's meme coin scandal. It observes limited critical coverage of the launch of the coin and the Washington Post's suggestion that the coin could be used for bribery. Although Fox reported on the coin's price surge, the article notes that criticisms were given minimal attention.
The author concludes that the right-wing media's consistent positive portrayal of Trump and negative portrayal of his opponents is a significant factor in his continued political influence. The article implies that this favorable coverage has enabled Trump to continue his political activities with little to no negative impact from negative events such as the Madison Square Garden rally.
They both shoulder some blame, but neither of those is really the answer. Every time I ask myself how he gets away with this, I remember: Oh, right. It’s the right-wing media. Duh.
After the election, I wrote a column that went viral about how the right-wing media made Trump’s election possible. Fox News, most conspicuously, but also Newsmax, One America News Network, Sinclair, and the rest, along with the swarm of right-wing podcasters and TikTokers, created a media environment in which Trump could do no wrong and Kamala Harris no right.
Think back—I know you’ve repressed it—to that horror-clown-show Madison Square Garden rally Trump held the week before the election. It was, as the Times put it, a “carnival of grievances, misogyny, and racism.” A generation or two ago, that would have finished off his campaign. Last year? It made no difference. No—it helped. And it helped because a vast propaganda network—armed with press passes and First Amendment protections—spent a week gabbing about how cool and manly it was.
Newsflash: They’re still at it.
First of all, Fox News is basically the megaphone of the Trump administration. In Trump’s first 100 days in office, key administration officials, reports Media Matters for America, appeared on Fox 536 times. That, obviously, is 5.36 times per day; in other words, assuming that a cable news “day” runs from 6 a.m. to midnight, that’s one administration official about every three hours. I’ve seen occasional clips where the odd host challenges them on this point or that, but in essence, this is a propaganda parade.
I tried to do some googling to see how Fox is covering the meme coin scandal. Admitting that Google doesn’t catch everything, the answer seems to be that it’s not. On the network’s website, there was a bland January 18 article reporting that he’d launched it; an actually interesting January 22 piece summarizing a critical column by The Washington Post’s Catherine Rampell, who charged that it was an invitation to bribery; and finally, an April 24 report that the coin surged in value after Trump announced the upcoming dinner—“critics” were given two paragraphs, deep in the article. (Interesting side note: Predictably, other figures on the far right have aped Trump by launching their own coins, among them former Proud Boys leader Enrique Tarrio and “QAnon Shaman” Jacob Chansley.)
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