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posted by Fnord666 on Wednesday May 03 2017, @03:12AM   Printer-friendly
from the fit-and-proper-yet? dept.

Various news outlets are reporting that Bill Shine has been replaced as co-president of Fox News Channel. Suzanne Scott has replaced him. In possibly related news, there are reports that 21st Century Fox, which owns Fox News Channel, is in talks with the Blackstone Group (a private equity investment firm) to purchase Tribune Media, a U.S. broadcasting chain.

In the UK, 21st Century Fox has requested permission from the government's Office of Communications to increase its ownership in Sky News; in April the network dismissed commentator Bill O'Reilly after paying out settlements in multiple sexual harassment lawsuits regarding Mr. O'Reilly.

coverage (Shine):

coverage (Tribune Media):

related story:
Fox News Chief Resigns


Original Submission

 
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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday May 03 2017, @12:31PM (2 children)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday May 03 2017, @12:31PM (#503583)

    This. The Democratic party is/was always divided among a number of somewhat disparate voting blocks - blacks gays, cityfolk, jews, Hollywoods, etc. Their triumph or failure always hinged on being able to unite enough of them into a single platform. The Republican party, however, was much more broad-base baseline, standing on principles - limited Government, lower taxation, states rights, strong defense, etc. Their success/failure has historically depended on how they've been able to stick to their principles without getting bogged down in side conversations (everything social). A good Republican candidate typically looks like a principled guy who is financially successful (won't screw up the economy).

    That said, the Republican party stands much more for being *against* things than *for* anything. What is the Republican position on a national healthcare system? No. What is the Republican position on using federal taxpayer monies to pay for Department of Education standards for all the states? No. What is the Republican position on enhancing gun regulation? No.

    For the last 8 years there has been an opportunity to run a news network on being *against* things. The stories write themselves - "[evil] President Obama is going to take your money and pay for programs. Programs that infringe on your freedom by taking your taxpayer dollars and forcing you to do anything at all. We at Fox News are against it! Government overreach!"

    But here's the thing - you can't really administer a nation by being against its administration. "I don't want a national healthcare system" isn't a *solution* or a *policy*. "Build a wall that no one thinks will fix immigration" isn't a *solution* or a *policy*. Additionally, Fox News can't very well be *against* everything that Trump does - he is representative of their side of the argument. Additionally, President Trump is unpopular and just fellating him ("The right and just president has just signed the best law ever written!") doesn't win viewers.

    They have nothing to report.

  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday May 03 2017, @02:27PM (1 child)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday May 03 2017, @02:27PM (#503644)

    They have nothing they WANT to report.

    • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday May 03 2017, @10:50PM

      by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday May 03 2017, @10:50PM (#504019)

      Yep fuck those evil republicans? Am I right?

      BTW your cognitive bias is showing.