So FOX News has decided to replace
Tucker Carlson with Bill O’Reilly’s one-time man-on-the-street interviewer,
Jesse Watters--someone whose gravitas rating hovers in the same abysmal neighborhood
as the network’s late-night darling, Greg Gutfeld.
What attracted folks like me to
Tucker’s program was his unpredictability, his willingness to let guests talk,
his repeated calls to spend time with family and loved ones, and his apparent
devotion to a moral vision rooted in religious tradition---all of which informed
his tagline opposition to “lying, pomposity, smugness, and group think.” The “group think” moniker wasn’t limited to
the multitude of Woke idiocies but also extended to third-rail GOP topics, most
conspicuously to opinions about the war in Ukraine. Republicans like Lindsay Graham who are welcomed
on Hannity’s program frequently found themselves targets of Carlson’s
anti-neocon, open border criticism.
A Mediaite analysis of primetime ratings showed FOX News
lost a million viewers after Tucker’s firing, viewership going from an average
of 2.6 million in the four weeks prior to Carlson’s departure to a 1.6 million
average in the four subsequent weeks.
The hemorrhage in Tucker’s 8 p.m. Eastern time slot was even more
dramatic, falling from 3.27 million to 1.49 million viewers—an outflow that continues to this day.
I doubt the network’s brass expect to
recover Tucker’s audience with Watters at the helm, a broadcaster whose comic
persona and intellectual shallowness (He wasn’t sure Hawaii was the 50th
state.) detract significantly from the impact of his largely accurate but
analogy-saturated critiques of leftist policies. Indeed, one might argue that the Paul Ryan
contingent on the network’s board have a death wish for FOX News as a
Trump-friendly conservative voice. What
else can explain Greg Gutfeld’s ubiquitous presence as a regular host on The Five plus his own late-night show
(soon to be at 10 p.m. Eastern and 7 p.m. on the West Coast). Gutfeld and his
assortment of handpicked outcasts do provide unique perspectives, but perspectives
largely communicated through the host’s obsession with foul language, sexual
deviancy, and scatology--all conjoined with an insult-spewing persona that
makes Don Rickles look like Pat Boone.
Granted, Gutfeld excels at monologues
that skewer Woke idiocies, but unlike Tucker, one senses a yawning spiritual
void at the heart of his tirades, a void not filled by the intoxicants he touts
with conspicuous fervor. In a recent Wall Street Journal piece about the
“irreverent” “King of Late Night” Gutfeld mused about taking over Carlson’s
prime time slot. Apparently replacing
Tucker with a crude libertine who displays no discernible connection to faith,
family, or activities cherished by ordinary Americans proved a bridge too far
for network suits in prime time--but not at 10 p.m. (or 7 in the West).
Certainly there’s no way Gutfeld’s
most regular panel member, Kat Timpf, could have taken Tucker’s place, though
for some reason FOX has allowed this intellectually vapid, morally-challenged libertarian
increasing time as a commentator whose appearances culminated in a panel chair on
Bret Baier’s program. Two on-point examples:
Timpf ignores human, legal, financial, and social service disasters caused by
an open border and instead regurgitates the unrealistic libertarian dogma that
an open border would be fine were no welfare benefits available. Similarly, she decries Governor DeSantis’s
efforts to protect young school children from wildly inappropriate books with
explicit sexual messages because such governmental action amounts to, in her
mind, right-wing censorship. Of course Timpf
ignores the fact that absent such intervention one leaves in place governing school
boards and curricula that facilitate the corruption of minors. The months-long promotion of Timpf’s gossipy, self-referential
book (You Can’t Joke About That) paired
with the network’s limiting promotional appearances for Judge Jeanine
Pirro’s substantive volume (Crimes
Against America: The Left’s Takedown of Our Republic) provides more
evidence that folks at FOX are working to eviscerate a once-conservative news
outlet.
The assortment of temporary hosts
that filled Tucker’s time slot over the last few weeks were generally competent
but only Will Cain provided the kind of perspective and passionate delivery
that rightly makes leftist heads explode, and only Joey Jones communicated the heartfelt compassion that Carlson also exuded. If one could graft those two hosts together
FOX might have something that comes close to the Carlson standard, but then the
globalist suits at the network would have to fire that broadcasting centaur as
an unacceptable threat to the D.C. Swamp.
Richard
Kirk is a freelance writer living in Southern California whose book Moral
Illiteracy: "Who's to Say?" is also available on Kindle
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