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In reply to the discussion: Ailes on Tape: “I think you and I should have had a sexual relationship a long time ago, & then..." [View all]and the rest of fools thought this was the way to go
http://www.newyorker.com/news/daily-comment/roger-ailes-the-clintons-and-the-scandals-of-the-scandalmongers
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his election year, the big question was supposed to be whether Hillary Clinton would shatter the glass ceiling. Instead, it has become the year in which one of the countrys most towering glass houses has shattered. Few people may remember it now, but Fox News, which Rupert Murdochs News Corporation launched in 1996, became a ratings leader largely because of its gleefully censorious coverage of Bill Clintons sex scandals. Now the network is mired in its own scandal. Last month, Roger Ailes resigned as Fox Newss chairman and C.E.O. in the face of multiple allegations of sexual harassment, including a lawsuit filed against him by the former anchor Gretchen Carlson. (Ailes has denied Carlsons allegations.) The unfolding embarrassment at the network poses a host of questionsnot the least of which is how the networks executives justified their Javert-like pursuit of Clintons extramarital affairs, given their bosss own repeated sexual misconduct. If you go back and look carefully at the chronology, some of Ailess most egregious alleged harassment of women was taking place at the same time that Fox News was suggesting that Clinton deserved to be impeached. Sexual harassment is a serious issue, and it merits serious coverage, but its hard to believe that the suits at Fox were motivated by genuine concern, given their own corporate culture.
Gabriel Sherman, in his 2014 book The Loudest Voice in the Room, describes how brilliantly and relentlessly Ailes exploited Clintons scandalous affair with the White House intern Monica Lewinsky in order to build Fox Newss brand. Sherman writes, Whatever else it was, the scandal was a media bonanza, and no medium benefited from it more than cable newsand no cable channel more than Fox News. Within hours of the Lewinsky story breaking, in January, 1998, Ailes inaugurated a new nightly show devoted to the melodrama, and assigned five producers and correspondents to cover it. No detail was too sordid for Fox to cover. With Ailes, a former Republican political operative, at the helm, Fox covered the affair as a criminal act, and rode the story straight up the cable-ratings charts. Monica was a news channels dream come true, John Moody, Foxs executive editor, once admitted.
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Cynicism beyond belief!