[lbo-talk] Rolling Stone: How Roger Ailes created Fox News starting in 1968

SA s11131978 at gmail.com
Tue May 31 10:00:52 PDT 2011


On 5/31/2011 9:35 AM, Doug Henwood wrote:


> This article assumes that Fox has a vast influence. But what about this:
>
>> Ailes knows exactly who is watching Fox News each day, and he is adept at playing to their darkest fears in the age of Obama. The network’s viewers are old, with a median age of 65: Ads cater to the immobile, the infirm and the incontinent, with appeals to join class action hip-replacement lawsuits, spots for products like Colon Flow and testimonials for the services of Liberator Medical (“Liberator gave me back the freedom I haven’t had since I started using catheters”). The audience is also almost exclusively white – only 1.38 percent of viewers are African-American. “Roger understands audiences,” says Rollins, the former Reagan consultant. “He knew how to target, which is what Fox News is all about.” The typical viewer of Hannity, to take the most stark example, is a pro-business (86 percent), Christian conservative (78 percent), Tea Party-backer (75 percent) with no college degree (66 percent), who is over age 50 (65 percent), supports the NRA (73 percent), doesn’t back gay rights (78 percent) and thinks government “does too much” (84 percent). “He’s got a niche audience and he’s programmed to it beautifully,” says a former News Corp. colleague. “He feeds them exactly what they want to hear.”
> This doesn't sound like the most crucial demographic in the U.S. These are people who are already right-wing, who have little social influence, and are, as Wallace Stevens put it in a poem title, on the way to the bus. (Total viewership is on the order of 3 million, which is 1% of the U.S. pop.) Yeah, Ailes is evil, but is Fox all that it's cracked up to be?

And the 3 million people who watch the far-left 24-hour propaganda organ, how do their demographics skew?

Besides, I don't see how "older white men" constitute a demographic with little social influence. It sounds like the demographic of most corporate CEOs. (The share of Fox viewers with a college degree is above the national average.) There's also good reason to think a disproportionate number of Fox viewers are small business owners.

The fact that there are enough core viewers to support an ongoing 24-hour propaganda outlet means that non-core viewers can be exposed to the propaganda too. How many times have you walked into a bar or restaurant (esp. outside NYC) with a TV tuned to Fox News? Given Fox's proven ability to insert freshly invented propaganda narratives into the national political discourse, I would say they have fairly vast influence.

SA



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