Fox News Channel

Fox News on Bill Ayers' and Bill Clinton's Shared Secret (Hint: Millions of Americans May Share It, Too)


Who says liberals and leftists can't get airtime on FOX News? The Huffington Post has video of an important Election Alert from Ruper Murdoch's the "fair and balanced" news network that features William Ayers—the man whom Senator John McCain referred to in the third debate as "an old washed-up terrorist"—voting in Chicago.

Here's Megyn Kelly's artful segue into the segment:

'Well, I'll tell ya what: From Bill Clinton to a very different kind of Barack Obama supporter, and that is William Ayers, who showed up and got caught on camera going into the voting station today.

Ms. Kelly closed the segment by once again drawing a line "from Bill Clinton to Bill Ayers.  read more »

Fox News: Everywhere You Want To Be


In 1993, Rolling Stone writer Hugh Gallagher forced himself to watch MTV for seven days straight. Mr. Gallagher's reaction to the experience was easily summed up in the headline to his story: "An Experiment in Terror."

In this week's New Republic, Isaac Chotiner tries a similar (but less immersive) experiment as he watched 24 Hours of Fox News.

Writes Mr. Chotiner:

As one might expect with Barack Obama so close to the presidency, the channel is in full nuclear meltdown mode; I was afraid the stench of desperation would waft out of the television set and into my studio apartment. Fox is going ballistic for good reason: These days, absolutely nothing is going right—in both declensions of the word. The paroxysms I witnessed hinted at an answer to a critical question: What will the opposition media look like during an Obama administration?

Mr. Chotiner calls Fox News "the right's main television outlet," a risky move since The Washington Post and The New York Times have each found themselves obliged to print corrections for referring to Bill O'Reilly as a "right-wing pundit" and Hannity & Colmes as a conservative show in recent weeks.  read more »

Mob Hits for March 31, 2008: Media Stories That Slipped Through The Cracks

Mob Hits for March 31, 2008: Media Stories That Slipped Through The Cracks

An O.G. in the Usual Gang of Idiots: The Times' Neil Genzlinger profiles MAD magazine's fold-in creator Al Jaffee and finds the 87-year-old writer/illustrator still up on youth culture. (Of course he is: The guy did a mind-blowing cover for Vice magazine's Comics Issue, after all.)

Fox Season: Time's James Poniewozik wonders about FOX News Channel's future since "I get a sense that the haven for conservative hosts, and viewers alienated by liberal news, needs to figure out its next act."

How Many Doors?: Vanity Fair's Rich Cohen talks to VF.com's Claire Howorth about interviewing Madonna in the May 2008 issue of the magazine."It was the longest day in history... I had to go through countless doors to get to Madonna. I did the interview at the same time they were shooting the satellite down, and it felt just like that. I had one shot, one chance." Was Cohen intentionally echoing VF editor Graydon Carter's infamous "seven rooms" theory of access?

First Defense: Slate's Jack Shafer warns you how not to look the fool--The April Fool tomorrow.(Flashback, here's the origins of April Fools Day according to The Simpsons.)

Night Shift: Super Tuesday II in the Fox News Studio

Night Shift: Super Tuesday II in the Fox News Studio
Courtesy Fox News Channel

Tuesday, March 4, around 8 p.m., Bill O’Reilly bounded across a chilly studio on the first floor of the News Corp. building on Sixth Avenue toward the desk at the back of the room.

There, the members of the Fox News Super Tuesday II political team—Brit Hume, Juan Williams, Bill Kristol, Nina Easton and Fred Barnes—were wrapping up another back-and-forth session, chewing over the night’s early returns. Mr. Kristol made an observation about the rationality of voters. A producer announced a break.  read more »

Ailes Acolyte Shepard Smith's Super Bowl Sunday!

Shepard Smith.
Getty Images
Shepard Smith.

Recently, Shepard Smith stood in his office at Fox News and gestured at a football, on his bookshelf, signed by Giants quarterback and fellow University of Mississippi alumnus Eli Manning.

“I’ve met him a number of times,” said Mr. Smith. “He’s a private guy. He’s likes to stay to himself. Eli, as a friend, would be weird. I like him being my quarterback.”

It was Friday afternoon and Mr. Smith—the host of Fox News’ Studio B, anchor of the The Fox Report, and possibly the highest-paid on-air talent in cable news history—was giving NYTV a tour of his office. Ole Miss madness was the decorative theme. A Rebels welcome mat warmed the entrance. Commemorative Ole Miss coins sat alongside bowl-game souvenirs. A framed photograph of Mr. Smith and his younger brother, pregaming under the oak trees on the Ole Miss campus, hung on the wall.  read more »

Fox "Will Respond" to Romney Campaign's Use of Debate Footage

An unlikely showdown could be developing between Rupert Murdoch's Fox News and a leading Republican presidential contender.

Last week, Fox sent out letters to the campaigns of each of the leading Republican presidential candidates, ordering them to stop using footage from Fox presidential debates in their campaign ads and on their web sites.

Today, Talking Points Memo reported that Mitt Romney’s campaign has decided to defy the order—and has sent a letter to FNC lawyers, explining as much. TPM suggests that Mr. Romney may be seeking to curry favor with conservative bloggers, many of whom oppose Fox on the issue.

How will Fox respond to Mr. Romney’s defiance? 


 read more »