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  • Tucker Carlson Denies Report That Ron DeSantis Got Inappropriate With His Dog, Does Not Deny Claim He Thinks DeSantis Is a “Fascist”

    Tucker Carlson Denies Report That Ron DeSantis Got Inappropriate With His Dog, Does Not Deny Claim He Thinks DeSantis Is a “Fascist”

    In his new book out this month, The Fall: The End of Fox News and the Murdoch Dynasty, veteran reporter Michael Wolff not surprisingly devotes a significant amount of time to the topic of star prime-time host turned unceremoniously fired guy Tucker Carlson. For instance, what does Carlson think of 2024 presidential hopeful Ron DeSantis and would he and his wife, Susie, ever willingly spend time with the governor of Florida? According to Wolff, the answers to those questions are (1) Carlson thinks DeSantis is a “fascist” and (2) the former TV show host and his wife would rather socialize with literally anyone else on earth, and given the choice between being in a room with DeSantis and being in a room with, say, Pol Pot, would choose Pol Pot. 

    Yes, in an excerpt published by New York magazine today, Wolff writes

    There had been quiet urgings at Fox for Carlson to be open-minded about Murdoch’s favored candidate. By early spring 2023, this had culminated in the DeSantises coming to lunch at the Carlsons’ home in Boca Grande, an exclusive community on Florida’s Gasparilla Island…. Carlson put DeSantis’s fate to a focus group of one: his wife. When they lived in Washington, Susie Carlson wouldn’t even see politicians. Carlson himself may have known everyone, dirtied himself for a paycheck, but not his wife. In her heart, it was 1985 and still a Wasp world, absent people, in Susie Carlson’s description and worldview, who were “impolite, hyperambitious, fraudulent.” She had no idea what was happening in the news and no interest in it. Her world was her children, her dogs, and the books she was reading. So the DeSantises were put to the Susie Carlson test.

    They failed it miserably. They had a total inability to read the room—one with a genteel, stay-at-home woman, here in her own house. For two hours, Ron DeSantis sat at her table talking in an outdoor voice indoors, failing to observe any basics of conversational ritual or propriety, reeling off an unself-conscious list of his programs and initiatives and political accomplishments. Impersonal, cold, uninterested in anything outside of himself. The Carlsons are dog people with four spaniels, the progeny of other spaniels they have had before, who sleep in their bed. DeSantis pushed the dog under the table. Had he kicked the dog? Susie Carlson’s judgment was clear: She did not ever want to be anywhere near anybody like that ever again. Her husband agreed. DeSantis, in Carlson’s view, was a “fascist.” Forget Ron DeSantis.

    In a text to Insider, Carlson insisted, of the dog story: “This is absurd. He never touched my dog, obviously.” Yet it does not appear that he denied Wolff’s claim that he thinks DeSantis is a “fascist” or that he and his wife were so repulsed by the governor that their takeaway from the lunch was that they never “want to be anywhere near anybody like that ever again.” Which suggests that Wolff got that detail exactly right. 

    Of course, the idea that Carlson—who has used the words “moderate,” “sensible,” and “wise” to describe aspiring authoritarian Donald Trump—would take issue with DeSantis’s fascist tendencies is extremely rich. In March, not long before he was fired, the Fox News host was devoting large parts of his show to the lie that January 6, i.e. an attempt to overturn the results of a free and fair election, was much ado about nothing, and that the rioters who attacked the US Capitol, “were not insurrectionists” but “sightseers.” (To be fair, as we learned via the Dominion case against Fox, what Carlson thinks and says in private and what he says on air are two very different things.)

    Elsewhere in the book, according to the Daily Beast, Wolff reports that Fox boss Rupert Murdoch, when told of Sean Hannity’s on-air defense about the network’s postelection coverage, responded: “He’s retarded, like most Americans”; that Murdoch’s fourth wife, Jerry Hall, accused him of being a “homophobe” during lunch with friends; and that eldest Murdoch son and Fox Corp. CEO Lachlan Murdoch, wipes his ass with Trump’s face—literally. “In the run-up to the 2016 election, the bathrooms at [Lachlan’s] house featured toilet paper with Trump’s face,” Wolff reportedly writes.

    In a statement, a Fox News spokesperson told the Daily Beast: “The fact that the last book by this author was spoofed in a Saturday Night Live skit is really all we need to know.” Speaking to Insider, a spokesman for DeSantis claimed the anecdote about the governor’s lunch with Carlson “is absurd and false,” adding: “Some will say or write anything to attack Ron DeSantis because they know he presents a threat to their worldview.”

    Bess Levin

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  • Trump Is Extremely Touchy About Voters Saying He Is Not “Mentally Up for the Job” of Being President

    Trump Is Extremely Touchy About Voters Saying He Is Not “Mentally Up for the Job” of Being President

    Last week, The Wall Street Journal released a poll showing that 49% of registered voters believe that Donald Trump is not “mentally up for the job” of being president. How did the former guy take the news? We’ll give you two guesses, but you will definitely only need one.

    On Sunday, after apparently having gotten around to reading or having the article read to him, Trump raged on Truth Social that the whole thing was was clearly a plot on Journal owner Rupert Murdoch’s part to make Joe Biden look good. “In a phony and probably rigged Wall Street Journal poll, coming out of nowhere to softened the mental incompetence blow that is so obvious with Crooked Joe Biden, they ask about my age and mentality,” he wrote. “Where did that come from? A few years ago I was the only one to agree to a mental acuity test, & ACED IT. Now that the Globalists at Fox & the WSJ have failed to push their 3rd tier candidate to success, they do this. Well, I hereby challenge Rupert Murdoch & Sons, Biden, WSJ heads, to acuity tests!”

    So, just a few things to note: One, it’s pretty unlikely that Murdoch, whose properties were basically state-run TV when Trump was president—and whose New York Post leads the field in obsessive Hunter Biden coverage—wants to do Joe Biden any favors. Two, as others have noted, Trump has never taken a “mental acuity test”; he took the Montreal Cognitive Assessment in 2020, which is used to test for signs of dementia. (In other words, having “ACED IT” is not something to brag about.)

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    And then, of course, there’s the hilarious “challenge” to Murdoch, Murdoch’s sons, Biden, and various Wall Street Journal brass—the terms of which Trump stipulated in a second post, writing: “I will name the place and the test, and it will be a tough one. Nobody will come even close to me! We can also throw some physical activity into it. I just won the Senior Club Championship at a big golf club, with many very good players. To do so you need strength, accuracy, touch and, above all, mental toughness. Ask Bret Baier (Fox), a very good golfer.”

    Ah, yes, nothing says, I’m confident in my abilities, quite like, I determine the test and the ground rules. Also, “I just won the Senior Club Championship at a big golf club” sounds less impressive when you know he has a reputation for cheating at golf.

    Anyway, this challenge comes just a few months after Trump declared that everyone running for president should have to take a “mental competency test.” So we can probably expect the former guy to soon require any voters questioning his presidential potential to take an IQ test as well.

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    Bess Levin

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  • World Reacts to Tucker Carlson’s Departure From Fox News Like the Allied Forces Just Defeated the Nazis

    World Reacts to Tucker Carlson’s Departure From Fox News Like the Allied Forces Just Defeated the Nazis

    Ron DeSantis appears a bit sensitive about his 2024 prospects

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    In which Republicans just drop the pretense of pretending they think democracy is a good thing

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    This, from the governor of Arkansas, is somehow real

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    Elsewhere!

    Joe Biden Won on Normalcy. Will That Be Enough for Reelection? (VF)

    Inside CNN’s Defenestration of Don Lemon (VF)

    Proud Boys saw themselves as “Trump’s army,” US says in trial closings (The Washington Post)

    San Francisco is a postcard from a driverless car future. Here’s what it’s like. (The Washington Post)

    Sheriff’s Office in Rural Kentucky Hires Detective Who Killed Breonna Taylor (NYT)

    The Religious Right Has Never Been Smaller or More Powerful (Intelligencer)

    Hunter Biden’s legal team wants Treasury investigation of ex-Trump aide, congressional action against MTG (NBC News)

    Loyal Bed Bath & Beyond NYC customers “devastated” after bankruptcy filing (NYP)

    Kyrsten Sinema Has a Net Favorability of -23, Per New Statewide Poll (Jezebel)

    Zoo seeking “seagull deterrents” to wear giant bird costumes, scare seagulls (UPI)

    Bess Levin

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  • ‘Succession’: The Real People Who Inspired the HBO Hit

    ‘Succession’: The Real People Who Inspired the HBO Hit

    In April 2019, The New York Times published a three-part investigation about the legacy of Rupert Murdoch that, among a number of juicy revelations, exposed the media mogul’s attempts to ease tensions among his children through group therapy sessions, including a “therapeutic retreat” at the family ranch in Australia. Roughly nine months earlier, a very similar scene played out on television screens during the first season of Succession. In “Austerlitz,” the HBO drama’s seventh episode, the fictional Roy family begrudgingly gathered in New Mexico for a therapy session after middle son Kendall’s failed attempt to knock his father, Logan, from power—only to discover that the whole gathering was a publicity stunt. 

    Succession’s creative team might not have realized they were so closely mirroring reality when they filmed that episode, but the goal has always been to tell a story that felt like it could be happening in real life too. “If you read the Financial Times and Wall Street Journal, you’d have a good sense of where we thought the show would go because it’s trying to reflect the world,” show creator Jesse Armstrong told The New Yorker in February, when he also announced that Succession’s upcoming fourth season would be its last. Indeed, many of Succession’s characters and plotlines can be traced back to real people and events. Over the years, the show has employed journalists and writers—media columnist Frank Rich is an executive producer, and novelist Gary Shteyngart and business journalist Merissa Marr have served as consultants—to aid in the accuracy of its world-building.  

    Succession’s third season ended more than a year ago with the often at-odds Roy siblings—Kendall (Jeremy Strong), Shiv (Sarah Snook), and Roman (Kieran Culkin)—teaming up to try to stop their father (Brian Cox) from selling the family business. But an eleventh hour heel turn from Shiv’s husband, Tom (Matthew Macfadyen), foiled their plans. HBO is keeping a tight lid on the events of the show’s final season—beyond dropping a few bread crumbs in a new trailer—but if previous seasons are any indication, there will be more than a few similarities to recent current events. Ahead, a breakdown of the real-world influences for the fictional world of Succession. 

    Jeremy Strong as Kendall Roy, Sarah Snook as Shiv Roy, and Kieran Culkin as Roman Roy.Courtesy of HBO.

    The Roy Family

    Armstrong has said that he drew from several dynastic families—including the Redstones, the Sulzbergers, and the Hearsts—when creating the Roys. But none appear to have been more influential than the Murdochs. In fact, Armstrong first began mining the lives of the rich and powerful for satire with a screenplay called Murdoch, which imagined the family convening for the birthday of Rupert Murdoch. It made the rounds in Hollywood, even landing on the Black List of top unproduced screenplays in 2010, but was never made. 

    Armstrong has said that Murdoch is “deeply in the background” of Succession, it’s clear that his work on the former informed the latter. Like the Murdochs, the Roys are a patriarchal family with control over a large media conglomerate. Waystar Royco, which the Roys like to boast is the fifth-largest media company in the world, controls a Fox News–esque conservative cable network called ATN; several newspapers; and a theme park and cruise ship business. Murdoch, meanwhile, has prevailed over News Corp—a powerful print media business whose tentacles reach as far as the UK and Australia—and an entertainment business that, at its height, included broadcast and cable networks, a film and television studio, a live entertainment division, and an Indian television provider. 

    Even the family structures of the Murdochs and the Roys are similar. Rupert Murdoch has six children from his first three marriages, including an older daughter, Prudence, who has largely avoided wading into the power struggle that has consumed the three children from his second marriage: Elisabeth, Lachlan, and James. The Roy Family, meanwhile, is made up of oldest son Connor (Alan Ruck)—who instead of working for the family business announces a presidential campaign in the second season—and his three younger siblings, who each believe they have what it takes to succeed their father as CEO of Waystar Royco.  

    Natalie Jarvey

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