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Published on The Language of Politics (http://www2.evergreen.edu/languageofpolitics)

Here is another article about FOX NEWS

By zoe
Created 2007-05-17 09:10

Launched in 1996, Fox News has in recent years consistently earned higher viewer ratings [1] than the other cable news networks. It is owned by News Corp. [2], which also owns Fox Broadcasting Co. [3] The media empire of News Corp. chairman and CEO Rupert Murdoch [4] also includes the conservative New York Post [5] and The Weekly Standard [6]. Roger Ailes, the chairman, CEO, and president of Fox News Channel, is a former aide to President Nixon, a consultant to President Reagan, and worked for George H. W. Bush's 1988 presidential campaign.

Fox News' programming features numerous on-air personalities who have furthered conservative misinformation, including Bill O'Reilly [7] on The O'Reilly Factor, who labels himself "a traditionalist"; Sean Hannity [8], who with Alan Colmes co-hosts Hannity & Colmes; and Brit Hume [9], host of Special Report, which is largely presented as straight news, though Hume injects his conservative perspective into much of the program's coverage. As a July 2004 Fairness & Accuracy in Reporting study has documented, Special Report regularly features one-on-one interviews with subjects who are conservative far more often than liberal or moderate [10]. The show also includes a discussion panel that often repeats Republican talking points [11]. The morning program Fox & Friends [12] features three hosts with conservative perspectives [13]. Carl Cameron [14], the network's chief White House correspondent, and congressional correspondent Brian Wilson [15] have both often presented ostensibly straight news programming with a slant that favors conservatives. Fox's other daytime programs (The Big Story with John Gibson [16], Fox News Live [17], and Your World with Neil Cavuto [18]) and its marquee weekend news show (Fox News Sunday with Chris Wallace [19], which also airs on Fox Broadcasting Co. affiliates) also are presented as objective news sources, yet Media Matters for America has compiled substantial research indicating the network's coverage most often favors the conservative viewpoint and often blatantly misinforms viewers.

Fox's featured programs (Fox & Friends, The O'Reilly Factor, and Hannity & Colmes) often advance misinformation that furthers the conservative position on an entire slate of issues. Besides the network's self-identified conservatives, Fox's "straight news" anchors and reporters continually amplify misinformation that favors the conservative viewpoint and on occasion have even admitted [20] their own conservative perspective.


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