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Tag: tucker carlson

  • Trump’s ‘Badass’ UFC Entrance Gets Spoiled By 1 Harsh Gesture From The Crowd

    Trump’s ‘Badass’ UFC Entrance Gets Spoiled By 1 Harsh Gesture From The Crowd

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    Former President Donald Trump brought along an army of friends with him to watch UFC action at Madison Square Garden this weekend but his entrance didn’t go without two middle fingers from the crowd.

    The former president continued shaking hands with the crowd before one woman flipped the double bird in his direction in a clip that has since gone viral.

    The woman, who sat beside stand-up comedian Bill Burr, appears to be the comic’s wife Nia Renée Hill.

    Social media users on X (formerly Twitter) gave the woman props for giving Trump the bird and called for the image to be put in a museum.

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  • The Untold Story of Tucker Carlson’s Ugly Exit From Fox News

    The Untold Story of Tucker Carlson’s Ugly Exit From Fox News

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    When Fox News Media CEO Suzanne Scott called Tucker Carlson around 11:15 a.m. on Monday, April 24, and said, “We’re taking you off the air,” she didn’t give him a reason. To Carlson, cancellation was unthinkable. He was the highest-rated host across all of cable news—and he was suddenly sentenced to execution. It was like somebody canceling Taylor Swift mid-tour or removing Stranger Things from Netflix before anyone could stream the ending. It made no sense.

    Carlson wasn’t given a path to sign off and pretend that it was on his terms, but Scott did offer him one thing—the chance to include his own comment in the press release. For a moment, he thought about saying yes; maybe he did want the breakup to sound mutually beneficial. But he quickly snapped out of that. He was being dumped, and he wanted everyone else to know it too. He tapped out a farewell email to his staff, known as the Tuckertroop, before his Fox email account was disabled. “I’ve never worked with better people in my life, and I don’t expect I ever will,” he wrote, adding: “I’m a little unclear on what’s going on right now, but at this point it looks unexpectedly bad.”

    Then the news erupted in public. “Fox News Media and Tucker Carlson have agreed to part ways,” the announcement said, abusing the word agreed and glaringly lacking any quote from the host. His production team was not given a heads-up, so they found out that Carlson was gone the same way as everyone else, through smartphone news alerts or texts from friends. The show’s senior executive producer Justin Wells was also sacked, but the rest of the staff was still on the clock. They were supposed to stay at their keyboards and whip up a replacement show that very night. Instead, they swapped theories about the canceling. One of his producers thought it was tied to Fox’s blockbuster $787.5 million settlement of the Dominion Voting Systems case, which was struck just a few days earlier. Another producer thought it was triggered by ex-producer Abby Grossberg’s lawsuits alleging a toxic workplace. A third wondered if it was somehow related to January 6 protester Ray Epps’s interview on 60 Minutes the night before, when Epps said Carlson was “going to any means possible to destroy my life.” Epps was believed to be preparing a lawsuit against Fox, which he would file in July.

    The reason Carlson’s team couldn’t immediately settle on one simple explanation is because there wasn’t one. Though Carlson would later suggest his ouster was a “condition” of the Dominion suit, there’s no evidence to support that theory, and both parties deny it. According to my reporting, many factors contributed to the defenestration of Carlson, which ranks among the biggest bombshells in cable news history, not only because of what his exit meant for Fox, but also what it meant for the Republican Party.

    Carlson was believed to have Trump-like hypnotic power over the GOP base. He was believed to be irreplaceable. But that impression was, in large part, a creation of Carlson’s. In truth, Carlson had alienated so many people, instigated so many internal and external scandals, fanned so many flames of ugliness, that his firing was inevitable. After all, he’d been fired from CNN and MSNBC earlier in his career. That’s why, at Fox, he puffed out his chest and pretended to be immune to attack. His long relationship with career vulnerability caused him to foster an image of untouchability. And it worked so well that even now, more than six months after his exit, people are wondering why it happened.

    The fact that Fox had no firm plan for its marquee 8 p.m. time slot—no splashy outside hire, no new graphics, no innovative new format—speaks to how suddenly and sloppily Carlson had been terminated. But some of Carlson’s staffers were not entirely shocked. They knew they pushed the envelope far past the point of a paper cut. “It was always going to end badly,” one Carlson producer said. “We knew we were burning too bright.” The royal we was something Carlson always used. He portrayed his production team—and only his team—as a force for good in the battle against the evils he presumed nightly. His entire show was about us versus them, and this approach extended to the rest of Fox, where Tucker Carlson Tonight had the appearance of a rogue unit. According to a Grossberg lawsuit, Carlson’s “bro-fest” environment was antagonistic toward other Fox shows, including Maria Bartiromo’s, where she had worked before. Grossberg said she was hauled into Wells’s office in her first week on the job and asked, “Is Maria Bartiromo fucking Kevin McCarthy?” (No, she said.)

    Through interviews for my book, Network of Lies, I found that Carlson’s producers and writers were more loyal to him than to Fox as a network. They were a saboteur squad of true believers, regarding the mother ship as almost enemy territory, since as a Fortune 500 company, Fox Corp had policies in place promoting diversity and supporting transgender employees—the very types of things Carlson railed against on air. Of course, Carlson always genuflected to Fox in public, praising the network for letting him “say what we think is true.” But his expressions of gratitude to Fox didn’t fool management because they knew how he acted in private. Six years in prime time had reshaped Carlson, darkened his heart, driven him to the edge. He berated Fox News executives in New York. He belittled people (like me) who scrutinized him. In the view of some of his own colleagues, he became unglued.

    While at Fox, Carlson always specified that he worked for the Murdochs, which was a way to elevate his standing and diminish what the org chart said: that his opinion show, like all the others, reported through executive vice president Meade Cooper to Scott, who was a rare female CEO in the male-dominated TV business. According to sources on the staff, Carlson shit-talked both women as well as his number one enemy within Fox News, the entrenched public relations boss Irena Briganti, whom he called a cunt.

    Carlson’s internal critics, of whom there were many, viewed his treatment of the female executives as part and parcel with the misogyny displayed on his show. More than a dozen current and former Fox staffers brought this problem up to me, unprompted. “Tucker is very titillated by misogyny,” a host said. Some of the staffers theorized that his mother’s mistreatment—she abandoned the family when Carlson was six—engendered a negativity toward women.

    The counterpoint I heard from a Fox lifer was that “Tucker didn’t respect anyone of any gender.” Carlson hit men with the same C-word too, so, according to Fox’s boys-will-be-boys etiquette, he was apparently an equal-opportunity basher. (Remember, this was supposed to be a defense of him.)

    Carlson told a friend that the word fuck “is so overused it’s lost all its power and meaning,” so cunt was more effective: “It’s super naughty, but it’s to the point.” His brand, weird as it was, revolved around the idea that he could call anyone the C-word, or anything else, at any time. He could say anything, do anything, and never be held accountable, so long as he commanded the attention and affection of millions. On the inside, that was partially true. Scott, for example, was personally disgusted by some of Carlson’s on-air comments and off-air conduct but felt hemmed in by Rupert and Lachlan Murdoch. She was in charge—except when she wasn’t.

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    Brian Stelter

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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”

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    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.”

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    Bess Levin

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  • Tucker Carlson Says He’s ‘Grateful’ For Elon Musk’s Swift Call To His Ex-Fox Producer

    Tucker Carlson Says He’s ‘Grateful’ For Elon Musk’s Swift Call To His Ex-Fox Producer

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    Tucker Carlson said that he’ll “never stop being grateful” for Elon Musk’s quick response to Fox News letting his executive producer go from the network in April.

    The ex-Fox News host, who got canned by the network along with former “Tucker Carlson Tonight” executive producer Justin Wells, told Barstool Sports founder Dave Portnoy this week that the network dropped Wells “within four minutes” of his own surprise firing.

    “He really didn’t do anything wrong. He was the best producer in all of television and everyone knew it,” declared Carlson during an interview for his X (formerly Twitter) show.

    “And Fox has a lot of nice people, a lot of very incompetent people obviously running it. And he was one of the only competent people in the whole business but they fired him, too.”

    Carlson went on to note that “within an hour” of the firing Musk called up Wells.

    “And [he] said, ‘You should come to Twitter,’ so I’ll never stop being grateful for that,” the host said.

    “We don’t work for Elon or anything, but we’re using the site just like everyone else uses it, which is a platform that’s not censored. And I’m super grateful for that.”

    Musk has previously stated that he doesn’t have a deal “of any kind whatsoever” with the host, who announced that he’d bring a show to X in May.

    He noted in May that Carlson would be “subject to the same rules & rewards of all content creators.” The host has since peddled conspiracy theories on Musk’s platform.

    Elsewhere in the interview, Carlson – who has been accused of misogyny – directed sexist remarks at the company as one “run by fearful women” and proclaimed that he “got along with everybody” before his firing.

    HuffPost didn’t immediately hear back from Fox News following a request for comment.

    Head to the 43:06 mark in the clip below for the host’s comments on Wells.

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  • Tucker Carlson Cooks Up Completely Bonkers New Trump Conspiracy Theory

    Tucker Carlson Cooks Up Completely Bonkers New Trump Conspiracy Theory

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    Former Fox News host Tucker Carlson launched a wild conspiracy theory during a podcast appearance, where he claimed that “they” will try to kill Donald Trump.

    “We’re speeding toward assassination, obviously, and no one will say that,” he told Adam Carolla. “I don’t know how you can’t reach that conclusion.”

    Carlson claimed that “permanent Washington” ― which consists of “both parties” ― wants the former president out of the picture completely.

    He said “they” have already tried protesting him, calling him names, impeaching him twice and indicting him four times.

    “And every single time his popularity rose,” Carlson claimed despite polls showing that Trump’s favorability rating since leaving office has held steady in the high 30s and low 40s, according to FiveThirtyEight.

    Carlson said none of those efforts have forced Trump out.

    “What’s next?” he asked. “I mean, y’know, graph it out, man!”

    Carlson’s Fox News show was known for its toxic mix of far-right conspiracy theories, racism, xenophobia and white nationalism.

    It was also the network’s number one show.

    Fox News parted ways with Carlson days after it agreed to pay $787.5 million to Dominion Voting Systems to settle a defamation lawsuit.

    While at the network, Carlson was notoriously sycophantic toward Trump, and just last week released a fawning interview with the former president on X, formerly known as Twitter.

    Behind the scenes, however, he held a very different point of view.

    I hate him passionately,” he wrote in a Jan. 4, 2021 text message in which he said he “can’t wait” until a time when he can ignore Trump.

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  • Tucker Carlson and Donald Trump Are Being Very Low-Key About Their Debate Counterprogramming

    Tucker Carlson and Donald Trump Are Being Very Low-Key About Their Debate Counterprogramming

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    Donald Trump’s prerecorded sit-down with Tucker Carlson isn’t just a way to draw attention from the inaugural Republican presidential primary debate on Wednesday night. The interview, reportedly filmed last week and set to debut on X, a.k.a Twitter, at 9 p.m. ET, also appears to be an underhanded middle finger to Fox News, which is hosting the debate. But according to a Washington Post report, Trump’s counterprogramming event of the summer almost didn’t happen. And even now, Vanity Fair has noticed, hours before it’s set to air, promotion of the event has been very low-key.

    “SPARKS WILL FLY,” Trump wrote Wednesday in a Truth Social post teasing the interview, which will reportedly air on X right as the debate is set to begin. Still, attention around the event has seemed muted; Trump confirmed the show will air at 9 p.m., but without mentioning the platform it will stream on. Meanwhile, Carlson promoted his upcoming interview with Hungarian president Viktor Orban in a Tuesday post, but as of 2 p.m. Wednesday, had yet to share anything about the Trump interview.

    According to the Post, part of the early silence around this interview was by design; Trump wanted to keep a will-he-or-won’t-he air of mystery around the GOP debate, and didn’t inform Republican National Committee chair Ronna McDaniel that he wouldn’t be attending until Sunday. Plus, organizing Carlson’s interview with Trump, filmed at Trump’s property in Bedminster, New Jersey, was mired in scheduling conflicts, the Post reported. Trump also took issue with the interview airing on X, given that it is a rival to Truth Social, the platform Trump helped launch following his suspension on Twitter (X owner Elon Musk has since welcomed Trump back on the platform, though the ex-president hasn’t taken him up on the offer). In the end, Carlson’s team successfully argued that Truth Social lacks the reach for such a high-profile interview, per the Post. These talks have been going on for months, as Vanity Fair’s Gabriel Sherman first reported in July.

    It’s fairly clear why Carlson and Trump would be at least interested in participating in anything that could pull viewers away from the Fox News debate. For one, Trump, the heavy favorite in the Republican presidential field, has little to gain by participating in a debate where he’d likely face tough questions about his mounting legal problems. He said as much in June, telling Fox’s Bret Baier that he does not want to waste an evening taking blows from candidates who are polling at “1 or 2% and 0%.” What’s more, his participation would give a free ratings boost to a network that he feels has turned against him in favor of other candidates. “Maybe they should have been loyal,” Trump has privately said of his decision to snub Fox, according to Rolling Stone. (Trump also lamented in a Truth Social post last week that Fox intentionally shows “the absolutely worst pictures of me, especially the big ‘orange’ one with my chin pulled way back. They think they are getting away with something, they’re not…And then they want me to debate!”). Carlson, meanwhile, will also have a prime opportunity to spite his old employer’s ratings and draw new viewers to his independent online show. Carlson, who lost his Fox News show in April, has been in a fight with Fox for months in an effort to get released from his network contract.

    Still, Carlson and Trump have had a rocky year in light of a series of Carlson’s text messages from January 2021 that were released as part of the lawsuit between Fox and Dominion Voting Systems. In the texts, the ex-Fox host privately disclosed that he hated Trump “passionately” and longed for a future when he could “ignore Trump most nights.” Trump seemed to brush off those texts in March, after Carlson aired a special that falsely described the “overwhelming majority” of January 6 rioters as confused “sightseers” and “not insurrectionists”—coverage Trump praised on Truth Social, writing of Carlson, “He doesn’t hate me, or at least, not anymore!’”

    Per the Daily Beast, Trump and Tucker’s conversation is expected to last two hours and be largely centered around foreign policy and Ukraine. Eight candidates are scheduled to participate in the Fox News debate: Florida governor Ron DeSantis, biotech entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy, former vice president Mike Pence, South Carolina senator Tim Scott, former South Carolina governor Nikki Haley, former Arkansas governor Asa Hutchinson, former New Jersey governor Chris Christie, and North Dakota governor Doug Burgum (though Burgum’s appearance is reportedly uncertain due to a serious basketball injury). Fox News “looks forward to hosting the first debate of the Republican presidential primary season, offering viewers an unmatched opportunity to learn more about the candidates’ positions on a variety of issues, which is essential to the electoral process,” a network spokesperson told the Post.

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    Caleb Ecarma

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  • A Parade of Listless Vessels

    A Parade of Listless Vessels

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    What are we all doing here?

    The Republicans’ first primary debate dangles on the calendar like one of those leftover paper snowflakes slapped up on the mini-fridge. It feels like a half-hearted vestige—it’s late summer, five months before the first votes are cast; precedent calls for a lineup of haircuts on a stage. And for the most part, the qualifiers will oblige, except for the main haircut—former President Donald Trump, barring some last-minute fit of FOMO that lands him in Milwaukee en route to his surrender to authorities in Georgia.

    So why should the rest of us bother? Would anyone watch a Mike Tyson fight if Iron Mike wasn’t actually fighting? Or The Sopranos, if Tony skipped the show for a therapy session (with Tucker Carlson)?

    Poor Milwaukee, by the way, which already suffered desertion three summers ago when it was selected to host the Democratic National Convention only to have COVID keep everyone home. Joe Biden blew off his own convention and didn’t bother to send an emissary (no Jill, Kamala, or even Doug). Delegates were told to stay away, and the city was left all spiffed up for only a crew of surgical-masked functionaries.

    Tonight’s pageant of also-rans must go on too. The Republican National Committee has decreed this kickoff debate to be a landmark event, sanctifying August 23 as a key date in the 2024 cycle. (“Cycle” feels like an especially apt cliché here—events spinning hypnotically in circles.) Never mind that Trump upended the traditional presidential campaign cycle years ago, and that it is now dictated by whatever whim he decides to follow at a given moment. No matter how much thunder Trump steals from this proceeding—by skipping it, counterprogramming it with Tucker, and potentially following it up with a morning-after mug shot—everyone else is still required to treat this spectacle as some big and pivotal showdown.

    As such, the media will swarm into town—because this is what we do and what we love (and because datelines impress). The host network, Fox News, will hype the clash—the “Melee in Milwaukee,” or some such. One-liners are being buffed, comebacks polished, and umbrage rehearsed. And no matter how effective certain gambits are deemed to be in practice, the absence of the GOP’s inescapable front-runner will only underscore how impotent the rest of the field has made themselves.

    Who knows? A debate stage crowded with eight twitchy egos carries the possibility for surprise. Strange things do happen. That’s why we watch. Trump has given his opponents an opportunity, at least in theory. They can seize this chance to hammer away at the most important issue of the campaign: Trump himself, his radiating legal jeopardy, and the recurring debacle of the GOP nominating him again and again (and probably again). This need not be the televised festival of appeasement that so many expect. And no doubt, there will be a few feisty outliers on the stage. Some of the bottom dogs—Chris Christie, maybe Mike Pence—will probably unleash some unpleasantness in the direction of the truant front-runner. They will have their “moments,” and commentators will praise them for “landing some punches.”

    Even so, tonight’s contest will inevitably suffer from two basic structural flaws. The main point, theoretically, of a political debate is to try to persuade voters to support your campaign instead of the other candidates’. But that presupposes a constituency of voters who can be persuaded by hearing a set of facts, or are open to being educated. This, on the whole, is not the audience we have here. A large and determinative and still deeply committed portion of the GOP electorate—the MAGA sector—has been more or less a closed box for seven years now.

    The rigid devotion that Trump continues to enjoy from much of his party keeps affirming itself in new and dispiriting ways. A CBS News/YouGov poll released over the weekend contained this doozy of a data point: 71 percent of Trump supporters said they are inclined to believe whatever Trump tells them. That compares with 63 percent who are inclined to believe what their friends and family tell them, 56 percent who believe conservative-media figures, and 42 percent who believe religious leaders.

    The other structural defect involves the likely self-neutering of tonight’s putative gladiators. Ideally, a debate features participants who actually want to win. That generally requires a willingness to attack their biggest adversary, whether he’s participating in the event or not, and especially when he holds a massive lead over them. Other than Kamikaze Christie, whom Republicans will almost certainly not nominate, most of the remaining “challengers” on the stage seem content to play for second place—running mate or 2028.

    Florida Governor Ron DeSantis insisted otherwise on Monday, when he claimed on Fox News that he would be the only Republican debater who is “not running to be vice president, I’m not running to be in the Cabinet, and I’m not running to be a contributor on cable news.” This reeked of projection, even though DeSantis would seem especially ill-suited to being a cable personality—even less well suited than he is to running for president.

    DeSantis suffered another indignity last week when The New York Times reported that a firm associated with the super PAC supporting his campaign, Never Back Down, had posted hundreds of pages of internal debate-strategy documents on its website. The game plan, summarized by the Times, called for DeSantis to “take a sledgehammer” to upstart Vivek Ramaswamy while also taking care to defend Trump from Christie’s likely bombardment. In other words, DeSantis would try to score easy goodwill by sidling up to the bully and vivisecting the real enemy, the thirsty biotech guy. So noble of the governor. Maybe Trump will send a thank-you note.

    DeSantis remains, for now, the Republicans’ most legitimate threat to Trump. But if these debate directives are a guide, why is he even bothering? The blueprint appears fully emblematic of everything wrong with his campaign: a bloated venture, playing for continued viability, and zero stomach for taking on Trump in a serious way. It’s also telling that someone decided to post the document trove in such a findable space online—which is either really dumb or really indicative of how badly someone in DeSantis World wants to embarrass him.

    Whether intentionally or not, DeSantis actually coined something memorable the other day when he chided Trump’s supporters for mindlessly following his every pronouncement—“listless vessels,” he called them. (He later said that he was referring to Trump’s endorsers in Congress, not voters.) This struck me as sneaky eloquence from DeSantis, or whoever wrote the line for him. But again, the phrase carried a strong whiff of projection as DeSantis prepared to lead the real parade of listless vessels to Milwaukee, content to bob along in the wake of the Titanic.

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    Mark Leibovich

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  • “Covering the Junior Varsity”: Political Reporters Prepare for a Trump-Less GOP Debate

    “Covering the Junior Varsity”: Political Reporters Prepare for a Trump-Less GOP Debate

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    “It feels sort of surreal.” That’s how one political reporter sized up this week’s split screen media moment, with second- and third-tier 2024 Republican candidates taking the stage in Milwaukee as party front-runner Donald Trump is expected to surrender to 2020-election-related charges in Atlanta. The reporter continued: “If you were to have said to me six months ago, he’s gonna be indicted by two different states and twice by the federal government, and his numbers are gonna go up, and he’ll be saying, Keep indicting me, my numbers are gonna go up—I’m not sure I would have believed that.”

    Indeed, despite facing 91 charges across four separate criminal cases, the former president has 62% of the GOP primary vote, according to a CBS News poll released Sunday. Florida governor Ron DeSantis is trailing at 16%—the only other Republican presidential candidate whom the poll puts in the double digits. “We’re just in this really foggy period of time. Trump is such a unique and singular figure, where all of these negatives are so built into his brand and shocking things don’t seem to really affect him that much,” said a second political reporter. “We’re seeing a lot of signs the electorate doesn’t give a shit overall. All of this noise, and the signal hasn’t really changed.”

    Trump has cited his whopping lead in his decision to skip the first primary debate, hosted by Fox News, and perhaps the rest. He’ll surely dominate headlines regardless this week, as he is expected to turn himself in at a Fulton County jail in Georgia—and reportedly plans to counterprogram the debate through a pretaped interview with former top Fox News host Tucker Carlson, who was taken off the air earlier this year.

    “The most important news story this week, affecting the presidential election, is not going to be on that debate stage,” a third political reporter said, referring to the Georgia charges. But there’s still reason to pay attention to Milwaukee, they added. “I must admit that I am really excited to go, because despite this concept [that the debate doesn’t matter if Trump doesn’t show], the fact of the matter is that half the party, polling shows, doesn’t want Trump.” The debate presents an opportunity for the rest of the qualified contenders—DeSantis, Chris Christie, Tim Scott, Nikki Haley, Vivek Ramaswamy, Doug Burgum, and Mike Pence, as of this writing—to distinguish themselves, but they’ll likely do so based on how they handle questions about the former president.

    Fox News’ Martha MacCallum, who is co-moderating with Bret Baier, recently told me that it will “absolutely be incumbent” upon the candidates to address Trump’s criminal charges, acknowledging that it could be a “minefield” for them. “He’s completely blotting out the sun,” a fourth political reporter said of Trump. “I see it as a continuation of what’s gone on during this campaign and also what’s gone on in the last eight years,” they said of the dynamic. “It’s made it very hard for any of these other candidates to get any real attention. Does anyone know what Nikki Haley said yesterday?”

    “It’s gonna be a debate to see who can be number two,” the second political reporter said, likening Christie—the most vocal Trump critic of the bunch—to the scorpion in the “Scorpion and the Frog” fable. “If Donald Trump is not there, then Ron DeSantis is getting stung. And what better thing than to watch your two enemies destroy each other?” This reporter wasn’t very optimistic about the viewing experience. “Expectations are very low that it’s gonna be that interesting. This is covering, like, the junior varsity,” they said.

    Some I spoke to are most interested to see who, aside from Christie, will be willing to take the gloves off on Trump. “It’s sort of a bizarre situation where he’s ahead of them by 40 points and they won’t take him on most of the time—in fact, most of the time they defend him,” said the first political reporter. “The whole thing has been, throughout his presidency, these folks who view themselves as smart Republicans saying he’s gonna fade, or go away on his own, or the justice system will take care of it, or voters will change their mind. Clearly, eight years in, sitting back and hoping someone else does something about it has not worked for Republicans who want to take him on.”

    Unprecedented is a word that has been thrown around often since 2016 to describe Trump and his impact on national politics. Some journalists feel it has never been more fitting than it is now. “It’s really uncharted territory for American political reporters,” as one put it, especially given those on the trail who are not necessarily familiar with the intricacies of the federal and state criminal law they’re now reporting on and talking to voters about. “It’s become a story where the people who cover the Justice Department and FBI are as much a part of the 2024 story as political reporters,” the reporter said. “They’re just as essential.”

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  • Tucker Carlson’s Media Venture May Be Coming Into Some Major Peter Thiel Cash: Report

    Tucker Carlson’s Media Venture May Be Coming Into Some Major Peter Thiel Cash: Report

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    No longer nestled in his prime-time perch at Fox News, Tucker Carlson appears to be getting by with a little help from his friends. The former Fox host and his team are reportedly in talks with conservative mega-donors Rebekah Mercer and Peter Thiel about funding a new media company he is launching with Republican political adviser Neil Patel. While Mercer and Thiel have yet to commit to the project publicly, both have expressed interest behind the scenes, according to a CNBC report published Tuesday that cited anonymous sources familiar with the discussions. Carlson and Patel are reportedly seeking hundreds of millions of dollars in funding for the yet-to-be-named company. (Neither Thiel, Mercer, nor Carlson responded to CNBC’s requests for comment.)

    Mercer’s potential investment is especially notable. Once described by Politico as “the most powerful woman in GOP politics,” the hedge fund heiress has previously invested in the conservative news site Breitbart News and helped forge the careers of right-wing commentator Milo Yiannopoulos and Trumpworld kingmaker Steve Bannon. In 2018, Mercer used her fortune to cofound the social media site Parler, a Twitter rival whose platform was used to help organize the Capitol riot.

    The CNBC report noted that Mercer has been talking with Carlson since Fox News fired him in April following the network’s $787.5 million settlement with Dominion Voting Systems.

    As for Thiel, the tech billionaire has focused much of his political spending on conservative candidates. Recently, however, the PayPal cofounder has also reportedly contributed to a number of right-wing media projects, including the conservative quarterly American Affairs, the “heterodox” online magazine Quillette, and an “anti-woke” film festival.

    Should Thiel donate to Carlson’s ambitious media venture, it would not be without precedent: In 2018, he reportedly considered launching a conservative cable news network, though nothing came of it, according BuzzFeed News. (It’s unclear whether Carlson and Thiel have talked about funding directly, but CNBC reported that Thiel deliberated with allies about the idea “after hearing from Carlson’s side.”)

    Since leaving Fox News, Carlson has continued sharing commentary videos on X, the social media company formerly known as Twitter. As CNBC reported last month, his Tucker on Twitter show has already landed a more than $1 million partnership deal with Public Square, a right-wing shopping platform run by Omeed Malik. According to CNBC, Malik has also been planning on investing eight figures in Carlson’s media company through 1789 Capital, an investment fund where Mercer reportedly serves as an executive officer. Given Mercer’s role at the firm, any further funding she provides to Carlson could build upon the amount already being planned by 1789 Capital, CNBC noted.

    Meanwhile, though Carlson has denied having any interest in seeking public office, that has not stopped one of his high-profile fans from urging the pundit to pursue the presidency. “If Tucker went to run in 2028, he could win,” popular podcaster Joe Rogan remarked recently. “He’s sort of a no-nonsense guy who exposes bullshit in pretty humorous way. In a very insightful and biting way.”

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  • Trump already taped Tucker Carlson interview that is expected to air on GOP debate night, sources say | CNN Politics

    Trump already taped Tucker Carlson interview that is expected to air on GOP debate night, sources say | CNN Politics

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    CNN
     — 

    Former President Donald Trump has already taped an interview with Tucker Carlson that is expected to be used as counterprogramming for the first GOP primary debate Wednesday, two sources familiar with the matter told CNN.

    Trump confirmed Sunday he will not participate in the debate in Milwaukee. Stating that the public already “knows who I am,” Trump wrote on his social media platform: “I will therefore not be doing the debates!”

    It is unclear what platform the interview with Carlson will be published on. The sources said that it would be released around the time of the debate Wednesday night.

    For weeks, the former president had privately and publicly floated skipping Wednesday’s debate, given his lead in the polls. He is expected to spend Wednesday evening at his golf club in Bedminster, New Jersey.

    CNN previously reported that Republican National Committee Chair Ronna McDaniel and David Bossie, who heads the RNC debate committee, visited Trump at his Bedminster home in recent weeks to encourage him to participate, according to a Trump adviser. The former president was noncommittal on his plans during this meeting.

    Fox News President Jay Wallace and the network’s chief executive, Suzanne Scott, had also encouraged Trump to participate in the debate. Trump has feuded with Fox News, as has former prime-time host Carlson, who was ousted from the network in April.

    Fox News informed the Trump campaign on Monday that they will no longer provide credentials to some surrogates of the former president to attend the spin room at the debate given Trump is not planning on participating, three sources with direct knowledge of the matter told CNN.

    Fox News is in charge of credentials for the spin room. However, the RNC manages credentials for the actual debate, and sources said those tickets are still expected be honored.

    Several of Trump’s advisers and top surrogates had been planning to attend both the debate and represent the former president in the spin room despite his absence, CNN previously reported. Some of Trump’s surrogates are credentialed through outside media groups and will not be impacted. Former Arizona gubernatorial candidate Kari Lake, Reps. Byron Donalds and Matt Gaetz of Florida and other Republicans are slated to attend the debate.

    Members of Trump’s campaign, including senior advisers Jason Miller, Steven Cheung and Chris LaCivita, were also planning on being in the spin room.

    Members of Trump’s teams and his surrogates, however, are still planning on traveling to Milwaukee and are working on a resolution with the network as well as the RNC, two Trump advisers told CNN. The former president’s aides also believe they will be able to find new credentials, one of the advisers said, and are confident they will be in the spin room on Wednesday.

    Fox News did not immediately respond to CNN’s request for comment.

    Trump’s absence leaves former Vice President Mike Pence, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley, entrepreneur Vivek Ramaswamy, North Dakota Gov. Doug Burgum, South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott, former Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson and former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie on the debate stage.

    To qualify for the debate, candidates must have at least 40,000 unique donors, with at least 200 unique donors per state, and must reach at least 1% in three national polls meeting the RNC’s requirements or at least 1% in two national polls and two polls from separate early voting states.

    Candidates are also expected to sign a loyalty pledge expressing their commitment to unite and back the eventual Republican nominee, regardless of who that is.

    The GOP field has used Trump’s expected absence to throw shots at the former president, with DeSantis on Monday saying Trump “owes it to people” to debate, arguing voters – even ones who appreciate the former president’s record – won’t “look kindly” at him sitting this one out.

    In a recent interview, Haley said it would be “hard to earn” voters’ support “if you’re absent.”

    And Christie told Newsmax earlier this month that if Trump “didn’t show up, it would be much more trouble for him, adding: “I doubt that I’ll miss an opportunity to bring his name up, especially if he decides to chicken out and not show up.”

    Ramaswamy, a frequent defender of Trump, struck a different tone than his opponents Monday night. “I have no issue with him skipping the first couple of debates,” the entrepreneur told CNN’s Kaitlan Collins on “The Source,” noting that he thought the former president should debate at some point this year.

    “The truth is, many people in this country didn’t know who I was six months ago, so, this is a good opportunity for me to introduce myself to the country,” he said.

    CORRECTION: This story has been updated to reflect that some Trump surrogates can still attend the debate itself but not appear in the spin room, which would require credentials from Fox.

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  • Looks Like Tucker Carlson Wants to Make Some Actual Money Off His Twitter Show

    Looks Like Tucker Carlson Wants to Make Some Actual Money Off His Twitter Show

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    Just over a month after kicking off his new Twitter show, former Fox News host Tucker Carlson is already working to raise hundreds of millions of dollars for a media company of his own, according to a Friday report from The Wall Street Journal. The new venture would allow Carlson—who lost his Fox show in April but remains under contract with the network through December of next year—to build upon his independently produced online show, per the Journal, by offering longer videos for paying subscribers.

    Presumably, this could involve the use of Twitter’s relatively new subscription product, which allows creators to host subscriber-only content and cash in on membership fees. While members of Carlson’s team recently met with Twitter representatives to discuss the pending project, they are also looking into other platforms and distribution ideas. Additionally, the Journal reported that Carlson and former White House adviser Neil Patel—with whom he previously founded the conservative Daily Caller—are exploring the creation of a website and a mobile app.

    During a recent interview on comedian Russell Brand’s podcast, Carlson praised Twitter owner Elon Musk for giving him a post–Fox News landing spot but said he has no financial relationship with the platform. “I don’t think I ever want to work for anyone again. I’ve done that,” he said. “I’d like to make money, I think that’s fair. I’ve made zero money since I left [Fox News], and that’s fine—but at some point, I’d like to.”

    Somewhat relatedly, this week, Musk opened the door for high-engagement Twitter Blue users—including Ian Miles Cheong, Benny Johnson, and Brian Krassenstein—to earn money directly from Twitter’s advertising revenue. “We’re expanding our creator monetization offering to include ads revenue sharing for creators,” the company wrote in a Thursday release. “This means that creators can get a share in ad revenue, starting in the replies to their posts.” Following the announcement, some creators—like right-wing influencer Andrew Tatereported receiving upwards of $20,000 from Twitter. The revenue-sharing program is only available to users who pay for Twitter Blue, the $8 monthly subscription service that replaced the site’s old verification system.

    As for Tucker on Twitter, the former prime-time pundit has aired nine episodes so far. Among his most recent episodes was a two and a half hour interview with Tate, who was recently charged by Romanian authorities with rape, human trafficking, and creating an organized crime group to sexually exploit women. He has denied all charges.

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    Caleb Ecarma

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  • Fox News’ Legal S–tstorm Is Only Getting Worse—Thanks to Tucker Carlson

    Fox News’ Legal S–tstorm Is Only Getting Worse—Thanks to Tucker Carlson

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    It’s been nearly three months since Tucker Carlson’s tumultuous departure from Fox News, and the network is still cleaning up his mess. On Wednesday, Fox was slapped with another Carlson-related lawsuit—this time by Ray Epps, the Trump supporter who Carlson and other right-wing personalities repeatedly claimed was an undercover federal agent in the January 6 Capitol riot.

    In their complaint filed with the Delaware Superior Court, Epps’s lawyers accuse Fox News of conjuring a “fantastical story”—one that portrayed their client as an agent provocateur who helped incite the insurrection on behalf of the FBI. They specifically mention commentary from Carlson, who they say waged a “years-long campaign” of lies that depicted Epps as a “villain” and “destroyed” his life.

    “Fox and Mr. Carlson made Epps the central figure in a lie they concocted about January 6, 2021. After destroying Epps’s reputation and livelihood, Fox will move on to its next story, while Ray and [wife] Robyn live in a 350-square foot RV and face harassment and fear true harm,” the suit says. “Fox must be held accountable.” While Carlson remains under contract with the network, his prime-time show was canceled earlier this year, which led him to produce an independent program on Twitter. (Per The New York Times, one of Epps’s lawyers, Michael Teter, first issued a retraction and apology request when Carlson was still at the network; that request was ignored.)

    The suit also makes reference to the network’s recent $787.5 million settlement in a defamation suit brought by Dominion Voting Systems. “Just as Fox had focused on voting machine companies when falsely claiming a rigged election, Fox knew it needed a scapegoat for January 6th,” reads the complaint, which was filed in the same Delaware court that heard the Dominion case.

    Epps’s legal offensive could bear out another loss for Fox, in part because it throws cold water on an argument that Fox’s lawyers have routinely used to shake past defamation suits. As Bill Grueskin, the former academic dean of Columbia Journalism School, tweeted: “The company has long held Tucker Carlson [and other hosts] can’t be held liable for defamation because they’re just expressing opinions. But Epps’ lawyers cite Carlson saying, on TV, ‘I knew for a fact.’”

    Fox News and Carlson did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

    Right-wing conspiracy theories about Epps began floating around in mid-2021, shortly after a video clip emerged of him addressing fellow Trump supporters on the night before the attack, urging them to enter the Capitol building the following day. During the insurrection itself, Epps was recorded offering to help officers push the rioters back. He was also never charged for his participation in the protest, leading figures like Carlson to accuse Epps of secretly working for the government.

    While Carlson’s theory was seemingly debunked in January of last year, with the Times reporting that Epps had set the record straight while speaking to House investigators in November 2021, it has nevertheless remained influential on the right—in both media and Congress. On Wednesday, Representative Troy Nehls, a Texas Republican, raised it during a hearing with FBI director Christopher Wray, asking him if he would be arresting Epps. (“I’m not going to engage here in a discussion about individual people who are or are not going to be prosecuted,” Wray answered.) “If you don’t arrest Mr. Epps, there’s a reason behind it,” Nehls told Wray. “I believe you know what it is, and it appears to me you are protecting this guy. I strongly recommend you get your house back in order.”

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    Caleb Ecarma

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  • Tucker Carlson May Be Losing His Relevance

    Tucker Carlson May Be Losing His Relevance

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    In the two months since Tucker Carlson announced his Twitter show, the former Fox News host is seemingly losing his relevance. Carlson, whose top-rated cable show was abruptly canceled by Fox News in April, first teased his move to Twitter with a May announcement that drew a whopping 137 million views as of Monday, according to the platform’s publicly available data. The first episode of Tucker on Twitter, released early last month, was met with similar fanfare, notching 120 million views.

    But in recent weeks, Carlson hasn’t come close to repeating those highs—a trend that’s already caught some media attention. Since mid-June, when the fourth episode of Tucker on Twitter aired, it hasn’t surpassed 33 million views. His eighth and latest episode—released on June 30—has managed only 9.1 million views as of publication. It’s also worth noting that those numbers can be easily misconstrued: The view count attached to all tweets—whether video, photo, or text—refers to the number of times a tweet was seen by anyone who came across it. It does not track how many users actually watched a video; rather, it lumps together those who quickly scrolled past along with those who hit the play button.

    Indeed, an NBC News report deciphering the true number of Tucker on Twitter viewers found that his first episode, which had a public view count of 90 million at the time of the report, actually netted 26 million video views as of June 16. The subsequent two installments received 13.2 million and 18.7 million video views, per data given to NBC News by an analytics firm. (Interestingly, two weeks before the June 6 launch of Tucker on Twitter, which marked the first time a high-profile personality has opted to air a show exclusively on Twitter, some Twitter users noticed that the site had removed its video view counter.)    

    All of this to say, Carlson’s social media adventure is perhaps not going as well as he’d hoped when he hailed it as the last big free speech platform left in the world. But Carlson also doesn’t seem wedded to Twitter, despite the fact that Elon Musk, who purchased the platform last October, has transformed it into a conservative haven. “I’m not working for Elon Musk. He hasn’t offered to hire me and if he did I wouldn’t accept. What he’s done is offered me what he’s offered every other user of Twitter, which is a chance to broadcast your views without a gatekeeper,” Carlson said in a recent appearance on comedian Russell Brand’s podcast. “What [Twitter] offers in the short term, at least for me, is an audience but also a better reason to write.”

    In the same interview, Carlson told Brand that he still doesn’t know why Fox News terminated his show. And while the network, where Carlson remains under contract through December 2024, has actively sought to stamp out Tucker on Twitter, Carlson insisted that he harbors no ill will toward the company. “I was shocked, but I wasn’t really shocked, and I wasn’t mad. It’s not my company,” he said, adding later, “I don’t know why I was fired—I really don’t. I’m not angry about it. You can believe me or not, but I think you can feel that I’m not. And you know, I wish Fox well.”

    When Carlson first lost his Fox News show, which for years had been among the network’s highest-rated programs, many questioned whether Carlson could hang on to relevance without Fox’s backing. It’s likely still too early to tell, but Twitter, at least right now, does really seem like only a short-term solution for the conservative personality. Sure, Carlson can get away with saying things that might get him in trouble on YouTube, Instagram, or Facebook, but Twitter has far fewer active users than those competitors. It also suffers from an infamously poor video player and has yet to provide creators with a way to monetize their videos, despite an assurance from Musk that Twitter will introduce revenue-sharing sometime in the future.

    For a path forward that does not involve social media, Carlson might look at the man who last occupied his Fox News time slot: Bill O’Reilly, who left the network in 2017 following five sexual misconduct settlements. Once the undisputed king of cable news, O’Reilly has largely disappeared from political relevance since leaving Fox and now hosts a streaming show for a small conservative network. 

    As for Fox News, it is still contending with possible legal trouble derived from Carlson’s programming. A lawyer representing Ray Epps, a man who says he has been falsely portrayed by Carlson and others as an undercover federal asset who helped foment the Capitol riot, hinted at that possibility in a statement to The New York Times this week. “We informed Fox in March that if they did not issue a formal on-air apology that we would pursue all available avenues to protect the Eppses’ rights,” said Michael Teter, Epps’s lawyer. “That remains our intent.” Fox News and Carlson did not respond to requests for comment. 

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    Caleb Ecarma

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  • Tucker Carlson Claims He ‘Really’ Doesn’t Know Why Fox News Parted Ways With Him

    Tucker Carlson Claims He ‘Really’ Doesn’t Know Why Fox News Parted Ways With Him

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    Ex-Fox News host Tucker Carlson said he “honestly” doesn’t know why his former network “fired” him in April.

    Carlson, who is eight episodes deep into his roughly one-month-old Twitter show, weighed in on his abrupt exit from Fox as he spoke with actor and podcast host Russell Brand.

    Carlson, who acknowledged his past departures from major news networks, said he was surprised and didn’t expect to be let go from Fox News earlier this year.

    “So I was shocked but I wasn’t really shocked. And I wasn’t mad. It’s not my company and when you work for someone else, that person reserves the right and in fact has inherently the right to decide whether you work there or not,” Carlson said.

    “I don’t know why I was fired, I really don’t. I’m not angry about it. You can believe me or not, but I think you can feel that I’m not.”

    Carlson, who added that he wishes Fox well, took aim at The New York Times after it detailed a “white men fight” text message he reportedly sent to one of his producers – a text that allegedly “set off a panic” among higher-ups at Fox.

    “There was, you know, ugly leaking, ‘I’m a racist’ or whatever – they leaked, someone there leaked, to The New York Times,” Carlson told Brand.

    “But that’s not true, and I think the people who run the company know that’s not true. Actually, don’t think they did it. And I’m not mad about it. And I’ve been happy.”

    HuffPost has reached out to Fox regarding Carlson’s remarks.

    Carlson’s comments arrive less than a month after his former network reportedly sent him a “cease and desist” letter regarding his new Twitter show, which Fox claims violates a contract with him that allegedly expires in 2025.

    The network has since laid off several of Carlson’s former staffers and named Jesse Watters as the personality set to permanently replace the former host’s prime-time slot later this month.

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  • Everything You Need To Know About Fox News Host Jesse Watters

    Everything You Need To Know About Fox News Host Jesse Watters

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    Television host Jesse Watters is set to take over Tucker Carlson’s 8 p.m. time slot after Carlson’s highly publicized departure. Here’s everything you need to know about the longtime Fox News anchor.

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  • Fox News names Tucker Carlson’s replacement to host 8 p.m. show

    Fox News names Tucker Carlson’s replacement to host 8 p.m. show

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    Fox News named Jesse Watters as Tucker Carlson’s replacement to host the network’s 8 p.m. show as part of a series of changes to its primetime lineup, Fox News Channel announced Monday. 

    Laura Ingraham will host “The Ingraham Angle” at 7 p.m., moving from her current 10 p.m. slot, with Watters taking over the 8 p.m. time slot to host “Jesse Watters Primetime.” Sean Hannity will remain the host of the network’s  9 p.m. show, with Greg Gutfeld moving to 10 p.m., Fox News said. “Fox News @ Night” with Trace Gallagher will air one hour earlier, at 11 p.m. The new lineup takes effect July 17.

    Watters’ show debuted last year, airing at 7 p.m. It has 2.6 million viewers, including 270,000 in the 25-54 age range, according to Fox News. 

    Watters also co-hosts “The Five,” a 5 p.m. roundtable discussion program. Additionally, he is the author of “How I Saved the World,” a New York Times bestseller that contains “thoughtful suggestions for overcoming left-wing radicalism, maintaining American democracy, moving beyond aging hippies (like his long-suffering, loving parents), saving the world from social justice warriors and the deep state — all while smirking his way through life in only the nicest way,” according to its description.


    Fox News settles defamation lawsuit with Dominion Voting Systems for $787 million

    07:26

    The shakeup comes after Carlson, the network’s biggest star, abruptly parted ways with Fox News in April. His departure came after “vulgar, offensive messages” about his colleagues surfaced in the Dominion Voting Systems lawsuit, according to The Wall Street Journal, which is owned by Fox News corporate parent Fox Corp.

    Fox News at the time said the split was mutual. Carlson has since launched a news show on Twitter, claiming the social media network owned by Elon Musk is one of few remaining platforms that allows free speech.

    “The last big one remaining in the world, the only one, is Twitter, where we are now. Twitter has long served as the place where our national conversation incubates and develops. Twitter is not a partisan site, everybody’s allowed here, and we think that’s a good thing,” he said in announcing his new show last month. 

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  • Tucker Carlson Is Using His Twitter Show to Escalate His War With Fox News

    Tucker Carlson Is Using His Twitter Show to Escalate His War With Fox News

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    Tucker Carlson is still technically under contract with Fox News—but that apparently isn’t stopping the host from attacking the network on his new Twitter video series. In the Thursday episode of Tucker on Twitter, Carlson’s latest venture since Fox canceled his prime-time show in April, the host spilled some internal drama playing out over at the network. Fox News has parted ways with the producer behind a Tuesday chyron that described Joe Biden as a “wannabe dictator,” Carlson said.

    Carlson did not mention the producer by name, though per a Daily Beast report, the producer was Alexander McCaskill, a former member of Carlson’s defunct Fox News show.

    Carlson did, however, take an apparent shot at the network’s chief executive, Suzanne Scott, saying that “the women who run the network panicked.” “First they scolded the producer who put the banner on the screen,” he added. “Less than 24 hours after that, he resigned. He had been at Fox for more than a decade. He was considered one of the most capable people in the building. He offered to stay for the customary two weeks, but Fox told him to clear out his desk and leave immediately.” (A Fox News spokesperson previously told Vanity Fair that “The chyron was taken down immediately and was addressed.”)

    Carlson is reportedly under a non-compete contract with Fox News through December 2024. According to Axios, the network sent him a cease and desist letter earlier this week over his decision to launch a new show on Twitter, making Carlson’s commentary on the network’s chyron “scandal,” as he put it, all the more intriguing.

    Carlson spends the segment defending McCaskill’s description of Biden and accusing the president of “trying to put the other candidate in prison for the rest of his life for a crime he himself committed.” Carlson also suggested that Biden has “a totalitarian impulse,” and baselessly linked him to the January arrest of Michelle Witthoeft, the mother of Ashli Babbitt, a pro-Trump rioter who was shot and killed by police after breaching the Capitol on January 6, 2021. (In reality, Witthoeft was arrested and charged after protesting without a permit on the second anniversary of the Capitol attack. The charges were later dropped.) 

    As for Fox News, the network has suffered repeated attacks from other right-wing media personalities since canning Carlson’s show. Most recently, popular right-wing podcast host Matt Walsh, a leading propagator of antitrans rhetoric, accused Fox Corp. of being too “woke” around LGBTQ+ issues (yes, the same Fox Corp. that frequently runs virulently anti-LGBTQ+ coverage on its news network).

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    Caleb Ecarma

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  • The Shake-Up at CNN: The Latest Development in the Media’s Identity Crisis

    The Shake-Up at CNN: The Latest Development in the Media’s Identity Crisis

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    It’s been quite the season of shake-ups for cable news: Earlier this week, news broke of the departure of CNN CEO Chris Licht after one chaotic year on the job—shocking, perhaps, only those who hadn’t yet read the bombshell Atlantic profile of Licht published just days before. This development, combined with declining ratings and the dismissals of Don Lemon and Fox News’ Tucker Carlson back in April, makes it clear that broadcasters are struggling to find their footing in an attention economy where the scale for outrage and urgency has been wholly broken by the Trump and COVID era. 

    But it’s not just a cable news problem, or one limited to legacy media. Across the board, digital and social media brands that have shaped the past decade of discourse have failed to realize their sunnier 2010s-era aspirations. Beloved brands like BuzzFeed News, MTV News, and Vice have recently been shuttered or gone bankrupt. Twitter’s continued decline under Elon Musk has prompted a spate of alternatives, like Bluesky, but platforms overall are also finding themselves increasingly under scrutiny (see: Montana’s banning of TikTok and the surgeon general’s serious warning about social media’s impact on kids’ mental health). The old order just can’t seem to adjust to the various pressures—and differing realities—of our current era. But is anyone getting it right?

    This week on Inside the Hive, Delia Cai and Hive staff writer Charlotte Klein discuss the prescient Licht profile and what it reveals about media’s larger state of crisis—one in which Carlson has turned to Twitter, once promising players like BuzzFeed News and Vice have failed, and everything just kind of feels like the depressing Succession finale

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    Delia Cai, Charlotte Klein

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  • Tucker Carlson Repeats the Same Old Script on Twitter—Only Under Worse Lighting

    Tucker Carlson Repeats the Same Old Script on Twitter—Only Under Worse Lighting

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    On Tuesday evening, Tucker Carlson aired the first episode of his new show on Twitter, which he used to launch a salvo at the “gatekeepers” in mainstream media and “Mr. and Mrs. Cable News Consumer.” The 10-minute installment included numerous remarks that read as veiled jabs against Fox News, where he remains under contract until early 2025 despite the network’s abrupt cancellation of his prime-time show in April. The mere existence of Tucker on Twitter—as his new venture is titled—serves as a middle finger to Rupert Murdoch’s empire, given the host’s ongoing contractual dispute over a noncompete provision he signed with Fox.

    As for the show itself, it appears to be a hit—just like Carlson’s old program. As of Wednesday afternoon, his premiere has amassed nearly 79 million views. However, that metric is likely heavily inflated, as Twitter owner Elon Musk personally explained while remarking on the success of the debut. “It simply counts if you saw the post on the X/Twitter app or via web browser, not how long you watched,” he wrote. In other words, users who merely scroll past a clip—but don’t watch it—are still added to the viewer tally. (YouTube, by contrast, only counts viewers who watch for at least 30 seconds.) Still, Carlson’s wide reach on Twitter can be seen in the episode’s other engagement indicators, with its combined likes, retweets, and bookmarks reaching more than 880,000 less than 24 hours after release.

    Perhaps more important than the metrics, Twitter offers Carlson the ability to engage with his millions of loyal fans and potentially maintain his perch atop the right-wing media hierarchy. Seated in front of wooden shelves and a rack of pool cues—a rustic cabin set similar to the one used on his Fox Nation talk show—Carlson laid out his issues du jour: UFOs and extraterrestrial life “are actually real”; Senator Lindsey Graham is aroused by the “aroma of death”; and Volodymyr Zelenskyy, Washington’s “shifty, dead-eyed Ukrainian friend in the tracksuit,” is a “persecutor of Christians.” He spent much of the video attacking pro-Ukraine elements within the legacy media and the GOP, singling out Graham in particular. The South Carolina Republican, said Carlson, is “so attracted” to Zelenskyy because of their shared appreciation for “the killing of a population.” 

    All told, the segment seemed indistinguishable from the hundreds of cold opens he performed for Fox News. But there was something undeniably off about the king of cable news stooping to an underproduced quick-hit internet show: He had no guests to cackle with or at. The lack of outrageous chyrons was noticeable. And it all came to an abrupt end immediately following his monologue. Still, Carlson appeared grateful to have a show at all. “As of today, we’ve come to Twitter,” he said in the closing moments of the video. “We’re told there are no gatekeepers here. If that turns out to be false, we’ll leave. But in the meantime…we’ll be back with much more very soon.”

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    Caleb Ecarma

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  • Tucker Carlson debuts his Twitter show:

    Tucker Carlson debuts his Twitter show:

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    Tucker Carlson on Tuesday posted the first episode of his new Twitter show since Fox News ousted him in April. The 10-minute video features the popular conservative commentator sitting in a wood-paneled room and delivering a monologue in which he skewers some of his favorite targets, including the news media.

    Carlson, who often trafficked in conspiracy theories in his time at Fox, raised questions in his short video about the September 11 terrorist attacks, the finances of convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein and UFOs.

    A more pertinent question for Carlson may be whether he can replicate his success at Fox News, where he was the network’s top ratings draw. At the same time, his sexist and racist comments over the years had also sparked advertiser boycotts, with major companies such as AstraZeneca and Pacific Life backing away from his former show

    In his Twitter video, Carlson took a swing at major media outlets, suggesting that journalists don’t cover the stories that “really matter.”

    “A small group of people control access to all relevant information and the rest of us don’t know,” Carlson said. “We are allowed to yak all we want about racism, but go ahead and talk about something that really matters and see what happens.”

    Carlson finished the show by saying that he hopes his show can thrive on the social media platform, which is now owned by billionaire Elon Musk.


    Fox News and Tucker Carlson part ways and Don Lemon says he was fired from CNN

    05:15

    “As of today, we’ve come to Twitter, which we hope will be the shortwave radio under the blanket,” he said. “We’re told there are no gatekeepers here. If that turns out to be false, we’ll leave.”

    He added, “In the meantime, we’re grateful to be here.”

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