Tag: Fox News

  • Does a news entity have to publish news?

     

     

    By John C. Watson

     

    Headlines in early March 2023 implied Fox News mogul Rupert Murdoch had made a damning confession. He had affirmed that some of his most important journalists were reporting that the 2020 presidential election was a fraud – even though they knew they were propagating a lie.

    It was an admission during pretrial testimony in a libel lawsuit filed against Fox by a voting machine company that says it was defamed by the lie. For journalism practitioners and devotees, the admission should signal the end of the Fox News empire.

    Nope. It didn’t.

    Such a disgraceful demise would seem inevitable when journalists – professionally trained truth gatherers, employed by a news organisation, which is an institution that exists to provide truthful information – choose not to do so.

    Nope.

    That’s because a business that calls itself a news organization actually does not have to be one – but it does have to be a business. Businesses exist primarily to make a profit and doing actual news isn’t essential. Adam Serwer, reporting for The Atlantic, wrote “sources at Fox told me to think of it not as a network per se, but as a profit machine.”

    News businesses or profit machines can hire anybody who falls off a turnip truck and label them journalists because the job has no standardised requirements.

    The US Bureau of Labour Statistics lists “None” as requirements for work experience and on-the-job training for journalists but indicates a bachelor’s degree is typical. Accordingly, the Fox News business people could choose to spread election lies and insist, as court documents indicate, that it made good business sense to do so because much of their audience did not want the actual truth about that topic.

    These are some of the troubling takeaways from Murdoch’s defence of his news business against a libel lawsuit filed by Dominion Voting Systems, the company implicated by Fox’s election fraud allegations. Fox essentially admits to publishing false information about Dominion, but argues it is nonetheless protected from liability. It is a defence grounded in the First Amendment, which protects press freedom so robustly that it also protects the irresponsible use of that freedom.

     

    There’s lying … and there’s defamation

    Murdoch’s admission was contained in court documents and was revealed in a New York Times story published on March 7, 2023. The story was about the US$1.6 billion libel lawsuit filed against Fox News by Dominion, the company Fox journalists repeatedly – and falsely – accused of rigging the 2020 presidential election to make sure Donald Trump lost.

    Internal Fox communications, reported by the New York Times, revealed that network journalists and their news executive bosses knew the 2020 election was not fraudulent, yet continued to allow lies about the election – told by hosts and their guests – to be spread to the public.

    Dominion claimed Fox’s audience recoiled when its journalists truthfully reported that Trump had lost the election. Dominion’s attorneys asserted that Fox feared the audience would switch their viewing allegiance to upstart conservative news organizations Newsmax and One America News.

    In a March 31, 2023, ruling, the judge hearing the case cited examples of Fox’s internal communications that demonstrated how journalism values were supplanted by the language and values of business. Among them was this quote attributed to a Fox Corporation board member: “If ratings go down, revenue goes down.” The judge also referred to Dominion’s claim that Fox chose to publish the (false) statements to win back viewers.

    Court documents show Dominion’s attorneys asked Murdoch: “What should the consequences be when Fox News executives knowingly allow lies to be broadcast?” Murdoch replied: “They should be reprimanded, maybe got rid of.”

    That response aligns with principles widely touted by professional news organisations and established in the ethical practice of journalism. Although journalism scholars and practitioners vary in their definitions of what a news organization is and who can claim to be a journalist, there is firm agreement that reporting facts, or at least making a good faith effort to do so, is an indispensable mandate for both.

    Yet Murdoch has not indicated an intention to discipline en masse Fox News employees who violated that ethical principle. Nor is he required to.

    Even the Society of Professional Journalists, the nation’s foremost advocate for ethical journalism, rejects punishments for those who violate its principles. Its ethics code says in part: “The code is entirely voluntary. … It has no enforcement provisions or penalties for violations, and SPJ strongly discourages anyone from attempting to use it that way.” The organisation concedes that news outlets can discipline their own journalists. Because journalists and their employers may be considered to be one entity, any disciplinary action is voluntary self-discipline. Neither journalists nor the news organizations they personify have to be truthful unless they want to.

    Lying in the press is unethical but does not necessarily strip liars of the protections provided by the First Amendment. There is an exception to this: the defamatory lie, one that injures a person or organisation’s reputation. That is what got Fox News sued.

     

    Assumptions fall

    Murdoch’s surprising statements were revealed in the lawsuit because his attorneys sought what’s called a “summary judgment” by the judge to decide the case without a trial, in order to avoid the prospect of facing a jury. That move makes sense given that some law scholars have found that juries rule against media defendants three times out of four.

    By law, summary judgment is available only when the parties agree on the material facts of the case.

    That meant Fox and Murdoch had to admit to Dominion’s most damning allegations, including confessing to broadcasting untrue statements and engaging in other unethical journalism practices. Even with those admissions, the First Amendment’s protection could still give Fox a chance to win the lawsuit – particularly if a jury did not hear the case.

    Without reaching trial or a verdict, the Dominion Voting Systems v. Fox News lawsuit has already produced some unsettling results. It has challenged journalism disciples’ assumption that news organisations exist to provide the public with truthful information about the most important issues in their civic lives. It has shaken journalism’s faithful who assume that good journalism is never bad for the business of journalism.

    Neither assumption is necessarily valid at Fox or anywhere. Anyone can claim to be a journalist, irrespective of their actual function. Any business can claim to be a news organisation. Functioning irresponsibly in either role is largely protected by the First Amendment and is therefore optional.

    Ethics imposed by independent state bar associations and state medical boards have made professional attorneys and physicians accountable by law as a means of ensuring responsible behaviour in their roles, which are considered essential to society. Journalism ethics, which are news organisation ethics, are wholly voluntary and can be set aside if they compromise profits.

    But if the ethics violations are defamatory, a successful libel lawsuit can impose accountability with a financial cost – money damages.The Conversation

     

    John C. Watson, is Associate Professor of Journalism, American University. This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

     

  • Killer News!

     

     

     

    By Ranjona Banerji

     

    Ranjona BanerjiThe supermarket shooting in Buffalo, New York which killed 10 Black Americans and injured three others is shocking enough, even if America is known for its mass shootings. The shooter, Payton Gendron, is a self-confessed fascist anti-Semite white supremacist. According to reports, he scouted out this predominantly Black neighbourhood and then drove 200 miles to carry out his crime.

     

    Gendron was influenced by the extreme right-wing “Great Replacement Theory” doing the rounds in America that falsely claims that Blacks are trying to replace Whites and that they are not really underprivileged or discriminated against.

    https://edition.cnn.com/2022/05/16/us/buffalo-supermarket-shooting-monday/index.html

     

    One of the main proponents of this evil and pernicious theory is TV anchor Tucker Carlson of Fox News.

     

    And here begin the similarities with the worst of Indian television.

     

    Across the spectrum, we have anchors like Carlson who night after night work to ramp up anti-Muslim, anti-Dalit and anti-Christian sentiment in India. They attack anyone who dares to contest their “theory” that Hindus are in danger. They pander to our basest feelings, to the worst of human ideas and beliefs.

     

    Far from having qualms about the hatred they spread and the inherent dangers therein, they are unashamedly proud of their work. “Anchor Anand” poses with a suitably superior look for his toxic show “the right stand” on CNN News18. (It is another matter that CNN International is constantly scathing about Tucker Carlson and about Fox News. That their Indian partner is a close copy bothers CNN International not.) Rahul Shivshankar of Times Now similarly pushes the false line that Hindus are in danger in India because of Muslims, Dalits and other religious minorities.

     

    All these TV channels are, goes without saying, huge admirers of the BJP and of Narendra Modi.

     

    As the BJP has moved closer to its core upper caste vote-bank over the past seven years, these TV channels have also moved from attacking liberals, writers, artists and academics to civil rights activists to “the elite” to Dalits, Christians, Sikhs and on to their favourite targets, Muslims.

     

    Their ways are many. From open bigotry to childish petulance. They follow the trend of Whatsapp forwards: Nehru never taught us that the Ramayana existed and so on.

     

    Thus, none of these channels will challenge the unmitigated nonsense from the Hindu right-wing that the Taj Mahal was once a Hindu temple. Instead, they will amplify Hindutva beliefs that every mosque and Muslim mausoleum in India was built on a Hindu temple.

     

    America’s lax gun control laws put weapons in the hands of murderers and fanatics. India’s laws may not be the same but as we have seen with mob violence over the past seven years, we do not need a Constitutional right to carry arms in order to murder and attack people on the basis of their religion and caste. Instead, we find that help for hate crimes is available from our police forces.

     

    Cue in the Delhi Police and TV person and channel owner Suresh Chavhanke who said he was ready to kill if need be for a “Hindu rashtra”. But the Delhi Police heard nothing.

    https://www.newslaundry.com/2022/04/22/after-delhi-police-says-no-hate-speech-by-suresh-chavhanke-at-event-sc-says-file-better-affidavit

     

    Thus, the Indian media is always there, as both instigator and cheerleader.

     

    Many parallels have already been made between this enormous segment of the Indian media and the infamous Radio Rwanda, which encouraged genocide by the Tutus against the Hutsis by spreading lies and hatred in Rwanda in the 1990s.

     

    The Carlson effect of instigation to death is one that we are long familiar with.

     

    There will be a price to pay.

     

    Ranjona Banerji is a senior journalist and commentator. She writes on MxMIndia every Tuesday and Friday. Her views here are personal

     

  • Star India is now part of 21st Century Fox

    By A Correspondent

     

    The Rupert Murdoch-owned News Corporation has been demerged. News Corp will now have publishing firms like The Wall Street Journal and Harper Collins and education firm Amplify, while 21st Century Fox will have Star, Twentieth Century Fox, Fox, Sky, National Geographic, Fox News, Fox Sports and FX.

     

    The old News Corporation announced yesterday that it has completed the previously announced separation of its business into two independent publicly-traded companies.

     

    21st Century Fox’s assets will span a global portfolio of cable and broadcasting properties, including Fox, FX, Fox News Channel, Fox Sports Network, National Geographic Channels, Star, Fox Pan American Sports, as well as film studio Twentieth Century Fox Film and television production studios Twentieth Century Fox Television and Shine Group. The Company’s assets also include leading pay-tv businesses Sky Deutschland, Sky Italia and its equity interests in BSkyB and Tata Sky.

     

    “21st Century Fox launches as a unique force bringing news and entertainment to more than a billion customers every day in over 100 languages,” said Rupert Murdoch, Chairman and CEO of 21st Century Fox. “Our success will continue to be rooted in a deep belief in originality and a commitment to empowering creative minds and entrepreneurs around the world. Our management teams are the best in the business and we will drive growth and shareholder value by expanding our existing assets and brands, while embracing new opportunities and technology.”

     

    While Mr Murdoch will be Chairman and CEO, son James Murdoch isDeputy Chief Operating Officer, Chairman and CEO, International. Chase Carey is President & Chief Operating Officer of the company.

     

    Meanwhile, the new News Corp will be a global network brands in news and information services, sports programming in Australia, digital real estate services, book publishing, digital education, and pay-TV distribution in Australia. News Corp’s global portfolio includes Amplify, The Australian, The Courier Mail, Dow Jones, Fox Sports Australia, Foxtel, HarperCollins, Herald Sun, The New York Post, News America Marketing, REA, The Sun, The Sunday Telegraph, The Sunday Times of London, The Times of London and The Wall Street Journal. Bedi Ajay Singh is Chief Financial Officer of News Corp.

     

    Robert Thomson, Chief Executive of News Corp, said, “We are continuing a proud tradition and fashioning a prosperous future in the new News Corp. We have a valuable collection of complementary companies and our task is to make the new News more than the sum of these distinguished parts. We have a robust balance sheet and a team of creative, energetic and passionate employees who are determined to make the company a resounding success and to make a positive difference in their communities.”

     

    “The new publishing company will be a test for investors and their appetite for print assets,” noted a Reuters report, adding: “While the company also has pay-TV assets and an equity stake in a real estate classified site in Australia, it is coming out as a separately traded company during a challenging times for newspapers. Advertisers are choosing to put their dollars elsewhere, especially in digital products. Although News Corp, like other publishers, is a player in the virtual work, advertising in digital media commands lower prices than traditional print publications.”

     

    According to a report in The Guardian, London by Lisa O’Caroll, “The demerger is the culmination of a two-year campaign to “detoxify” the News Corp brand that started in the summer of 2011 with the abrupt closure of the News of the World and finished with the announcement in the last week that News International’s brand in London would be axed and the company rebranded News UK.”

     

  • Comment: Jehangir Pocha on Media’s new Moguls

    By Invitation

     

    By Jehangir S Pocha

     

    Among all the transformations taking place in media, here’s the crucial one – the media baron is being replaced by the media conglomerate.

     

    Corporations are buying news properties once owned by individual proprietors at a rapid pace. Expectedly, media mavens and professionals are crowding conferences to express their angst: Are these oligarchs becoming media’s new moguls only to protect their empires and project their interests? Will they interfere every time a story is done on their favourite babu, minister or party?

     

    But this holier-than-thou approach that automatically assumes a media baron is better for journalism than a media conglomerate is as reactionary as it is wrong.

     

    A corporation owning a news property can be expected to slant or kill a story inimical to its core interests.  But those are few and far between.

     

    After all, how many core interests can a corporation have? On the other hand, many media barons have been notoriously whimsical, politicized, opinioned and ideological, slanting almost every story almost every day, and killing (or overlooking or underplaying) almost every story out of sync with their ideology, views or interests.

     

    In all democracies, the most slanted and ideological journalism has always been driven by media barons, from William Randolph Hearst, to Ramnath Goenka, Thaksin Shinawatra, Rupert Murdoch, Silvio Berlusconi, Michael Bloomberg and others.

     

    Their news properties have openly, sometimes shamelessly, displayed their biases.  Compare Murdoch’s Fox News with its corporate-owned competitors, NBC News (owned by General Electric), CBS (owned by Westinghouse), ABC (owned by Disney) and CNN (owned briefly by AOL). Which is most slanted? Which is most protective of vested interests? Which would any unbiased media professional rather work for?

     

    Yes, a media corporation might protect its pet politicians and restrain its news properties from covering its other businesses fairly. But many media barons do the same. Some appear to have more pet politicians than any corporation. In fact, often the “other business” of media barons is politics (consider Berlusconi, Thaksin, and Bloomberg).

     

    When it comes to coverage of oneself, it is India’s media barons who have constructed the self-serving maxim that “media mustn’t cover media”, leaving them free of all public scrutiny. That’s what’s allowed some of these tycoons to injure Indian media and dupe their viewer/reader by introducing poisonous practices like “paid news” and “private treaties”.

     

    It is highly unlikely that any media conglomerate would allow such practices precisely because of the fear of public scrutiny that publicly-listed and/or publicly known corporations naturally have. Companies run by professionals and overseen by a board of directors that includes independents and representatives from government-owned institutions are generally forced to put in place the systems and standards needed to run a business right.  Media barons exempt from oversight rarely do so.  This is why Murdoch’s newspapers spy on people and others don’t.

     

    This doesn’t mean concerns over how corporations will manage their new media enterprises can be ignored.

     

    As Indian media comes of age it must codify its journalistic standards and rigorously implement them through an independent body akin to Britain’s Media Standards Trust. Such a body should give India’s journalists protections, such as the legal right not to disclose a source, and freedom from prior restraint (attempts to prevent publishing/airing of an opinion/idea/story before it is published/aired).

     

    Every news organization must also be required to have an independent Ombudsman charged with ensuring fair and balanced coverage.  At the same time, this Ombudsman and/or the standards authority should also ensure journalists and news outfits respect the rights and reputations of others (anti-defamation), separate news from views, eschew ‘paid news’ and private treaties, protect national security, public order, and public health, and prevent incitement to hostility, violence or discrimination.

     

    Stringent regulations that prevent any monopolistic control of news are also essential to any democracy. To some extent, digital technologies and social media already ensure this. A smart line on Twitter or great video on YouTube can become more influential than an op-ed in the Times of India. But the government must still work to ensure there are enough voices in the media and that no one voice dominates the national discourse.

     

    Corporations enter (and sometimes dominate) the media business because it is highly capital-intensive. So, one effective way to maintain a plurality of views in news is to keep entry barriers and operating costs in the business low. For example, existing distortions in media policy, such as exorbitant “carriage fees” that benefit the well-heeled and hurt small news operations must be ended. Banks must be encouraged to lend to smaller media companies, capital requirements in the industry should be eased and more journalism schools built to develop a larger talent pool. Building stronger news-related services, like more text and video wire services, freelancer organizations, and shared news infrastructure, would also help newer and smaller players. Lastly, the government must pass laws to separate carriage from content, and control media cross-holdings.

     

    Ultimately, every kind of media owner – the government, individual, the public trust and the corporation – comes with pros and cons. India knows well the short-comings of the first three.  We will now discover the dangers of the fourth.  But as long as all four kinds of news organizations are allowed to exist and flourish – and are subjected to firm and fair regulation and oversight – the news media in India will remain strong and vibrant.

     

    Jehangir Pocha is CEO, INX News.

    The views expressed here are the writer’s and not necessarily those of MxMIndia.