
TV news anchors may have a lot to answer for
-- whether in front of the camera or not.
On the same day that Fox News Channel’s Tucker Carlson was shown the door, CNN said goodbye to its popular prime-time host Don Lemon.
The departure of Lemon was attributed to “misconduct issues” at CNN. Fox News Channel did not offer specific details about Carlson's dismissal -- saying only that “Fox News Media
and Tucker Carlson have agreed to part ways.”
A number of reports said it was partly the result of the Dominion Voting Systems depositions and releases of Carlson's admissions off-air via texts and emails -- that he knew that
manipulation of voting systems in the 2020 Presidential election was entirely false.
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In Fox's release about Carlson, the sentence following the statement “agreed to part ways” said
“we thank him for his service.”
Service. As if someone enlisted for the job -- or perhaps was drafted for service. It's an interesting choice of words for someone who had
been Fox News Channel's leading personality in terms of viewership and national TV advertising sales.
Fox is not immune from its own "misconduct" issues linked to its hosts and
executives in the past. Bill O’Reilly left in 2016, and Fox News Channel chairman and chief executive officer Roger Ailes was pushed out for the same reasons two years later.
Even
straight-up news stories on broadcast networks can become an issue. In 2013, NBC's Brian Williams said on David Letterman's late-night show about an assignment in Iraq that "two of our four
helicopters were hit by ground-fire, including the one I was in, RPG and AK-47." That never happened.
All this could be good news for any TV news channels that are holding their on-air
journalists and hosts always accountable. But really -- how long does it last before the next mishap occurs? Is that just the spillage we get from wanting live, or near-real time live TV content?
So what have we learned here? After Carlson's ouster, Newsmax CEO Christopher Ruddy issued a statement that said: “For a while Fox News has been moving to become establishment media and
Tucker Carlson’s removal is a big milestone in that effort.. Millions of viewers who liked the old Fox News [emphasis added] have made the switch to Newsmax and Tucker’s departure will
only fuel that trend.”
Ah, the “old Fox News.” Hmm..
What is that exactly? And taking it further, what is the old CNN? Or the old NBC News, or
the old ABC News?
A seemingly respectable TV news anchor has to do the right thing on and off the air.
And when mistakes occur, ownership of those errors in
judgment and actions must be addressed quickly. But lessons learned may not always stick too well for the next person.