47 online
 
Most Popular Choices
Share on Facebook 29 Printer Friendly Page More Sharing
OpEdNews Op Eds    H2'ed 2/14/09

The Fox Disconnect

By Courtney E. Martin  Posted by Rady Ananda (about the submitter)       (Page 1 of 1 pages)   16 comments
Message Rady Ananda

The green room of The O’Reilly Factor is a surprisingly jovial place. I’m led back to the hair and makeup booths by a fresh-faced intern, and I don’t even mind it when the really nice woman from Pittsburgh teases my hair because we’re having such a great conversation about urban renewal. The producer wanders back and we chat. He wonders if I always take a hard liberal line and I explain that, because I’m from Colorado Springs, and have lots of red-blooded Republicans in my family, I don’t dehumanize the conservative side, but I tend to think in progressive ways. It turns out that he went to boarding school in Colorado Springs. We play the name game to no avail. It’s friendly. It’s light. And then he says what every producer and/or host has said to me every time I have done a conservative television or radio program: “You ready to have some fun?”

Laura Ingraham said it to me right before she screamed, “Do you even believe in God?” and wondered if my parents were “deeply ashamed” of me. Neil Cavuto’s producer said it to me right before Neil insinuated that I was 17-years-old—on the air. And now O’Reilly’s producer said it to me, directly prior to Bill’s temper tantrum about being called sexist. He got so riled up that he directed the crew to shut off the outro music so he could yell a little more.

I know that these folks think of their shows as performances. More than news programs, they are three ring circuses—bring in the donkeys so the elephants can rough them up to raise the ratings. But what bothers me about the “ready to have some fun” framing is that it denies any culpability in the vitriol that comes after. Laura or Neil or Bill’s own rhetoric and thespian flare is one thing. But the email that their viewers immediately send is quite another. Here are some PG-rated samples:

You are living proof of Limbaugh's Undeniable Truth of Life, #24; Feminism was established in order to allow unattractive women equal access to the mainstream. Proof? I love your jutting lower jaw and crooked face. You have a face for a writer.

Feminism as practiced by the likes of you is nothing more than a means to gain access to the mainstream of society for and by ugly, loudmouthed bitches and lesbians that no one wants to be around. One of my jobs as a man is to protect (deserving) women. I would NOT protect you. In fact, I would toss you to the predators. I would trade you to the predators. I would betray you to the predators. I would NOT want you to pass on your weak genetics.

Bill O'reiley [sic] should have spanked you on his show.


So while it may be all fun and games to O’Reilly or the other Fox regulars, there are real world consequences—some of which documentary filmmakers and media critics have documented in excruciating detail—to the climate of partisan rage and hatred of the other they promote. Hosts like O’Reilly and Ingraham model a particularly vicious and shallow way of relating to those who think unlike themselves—taken to the extreme by their viewers who hide behind the veil of the internet (although some of them, shockingly, send this kind of vitriol from their professional email accounts). It is as if right wing pundits provide the material of partisan hatred, sexist objectification, and spurious logic, and some of their viewers take it and shape it into freakish proportions.

I actually sent Bill O’Reilly’s producer a link to a feministing post that I had written featuring many of these hateful emails, and he immediately wrote back: “I’m sorry to read some of those emails—Bill obviously doesn’t condone that kind of nasty commentary to you—or any of our guests!” It’s kind of him, but frankly doesn’t own up to the link between Bill’s show and these emails. Bill may not direct his viewers to spew hatred and violence towards his guests, but whatever he’s doing sure produces a lot of it.

I’m not afraid, but I am disturbed by the disconnect. Because unlike those who emailed me, I see Bill and Laura and Neil as real, complex human beings. I disagree with them ideologically, but I assume that they actually strive to be moral actors in the world. Of course we have different definitions of morality, but hiding behind the performance of punditry and downplaying the power of their words is, at best, insincere and, at worst, dangerous in both blue and red America.   

MSNBC’s Keith Olbermann, in fact, just the other night cited a not so tenuous connection between the inflammatory rhetoric of Bernard Goldberg, one of Bill’s favorite regulars, and a recent double murder/suicide. Olbermann pointed out that Goldberg’s hateful rhetoric (“Screw them…they are unimportant people, they are throwing spitballs at battle ships”) about the women taking issue with O’Reilly’s description of Helen Thomas (ahem, ahem, me) coincided with the release this week of murderer Jim David Adkisson’s suicide note. In it, Adkisson stated that he stormed a Tennessee church and murdered two people as proxies for all the Democrats in the House and Senate whom he would like to kill, in addition to the people in Goldberg’s book 100 People Who Are Screwing Up America.

Olbermann explained: “None of us at any end of the political spectrum can be responsible for what the ultimately hateful or the deranged wrongly infer from our work, but the same week it is revealed that this terrorist is partially inspired by Bernard Goldberg maybe Mr. Goldberg could skip the lines about screw them…Wait til Monday until you give the next Jim David Adkisson something to work with, sir.”

Or how about ceasing the inflammatory rhetoric all together and trying to return punditry to a state of actual dialogue? 


(Image by Unknown Owner)   Details   DMCA

Originally posted at The Women's Media Center, a non-profit organization founded by Jane Fonda, Gloria Steinem, and Robin Morgan, dedicated to making women visible and powerful in the media.

Rate It | View Ratings

Rady Ananda Social Media Pages: Facebook page url on login Profile not filled in       Twitter page url on login Profile not filled in       Linkedin page url on login Profile not filled in       Instagram page url on login Profile not filled in

In 2004, Rady Ananda joined the growing community of citizen journalists. Initially focused on elections, she investigated the 2004 Ohio election, organizing, training and leading several forays into counties to photograph the 2004 ballots. She officially served at three recounts, including the 2004 recount. She also organized and led the team that audited Franklin County Ohio's 2006 election, proving the number of voter signatures did not match official results. Her work appears in three books.

Her blogs also address religious, gender, sexual and racial equality, as well as environmental issues; and are sprinkled with book and film reviews on various topics. She spent most of her working life as a researcher or investigator for private lawyers, and five years as an editor.

She graduated from The Ohio State University's School of Agriculture in December 2003 with a B.S. in Natural Resources.

All material offered here is the property of Rady Ananda, copyright 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009. Permission is granted to repost, with proper attribution including the original link.

"In a time of universal deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act." Tell the truth anyway.

Go To Commenting
The views expressed herein are the sole responsibility of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of this website or its editors.
Writers Guidelines

 
Support OpEdNews

OpEdNews depends upon can't survive without your help.

If you value this article and the work of OpEdNews, please either Donate or Purchase a premium membership.

STAY IN THE KNOW
If you've enjoyed this, sign up for our daily or weekly newsletter to get lots of great progressive content.
Daily Weekly     OpEd News Newsletter
Name
Email
   (Opens new browser window)
 

To View Comments or Join the Conversation:

Tell A Friend