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Mehdi Hasan: Tulsi Gabbard Isn’t at Fox News to Push Progressive Messages

Gabbard hosted the “Tucker Carlson Tonight” show, and Hasan discussed the former politician’s arrival on Fox News on his Friday show.

Eduardo Razo

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Mehdi Hasan

Tulsi Gabbard was a long-shot candidate during the Democratic presidential primaries leading up to the 2020 election. Two years later, she has become a regular on Fox News programming. 

Furthermore, Gabbard hosted one of the popular timeslots on the network filling in for Tucker Carlson on his “Tucker Carlson Tonight” show. Mehdi Hasan discussed the former politician’s arrival on Fox News on his Friday show. 

Hasan added that Gabbard isn’t on Fox News to push progressive messages to a largely conservative audience, considering she was the vice chair of the Democratic National Committee and endorsed Bernie Sanders in 2016 and Joe Biden in 2020

“So what is a woman who was holding forth on the Democratic presidential debate stage two years ago doing anchoring Fox’s hour of hate?” Hasan asked. 

“Maybe she was using the incredible platform given to her by Fox to reach right-wing viewers with progressive messaging about Medicare for all, about a Green New Deal, or making corporations pay their fair share of taxes. Sadly not.”

For MSNBC columnist Molly Jong-Fast Gabbard is a powerful symbol for conservatives. The former Democratic House member from Hawaii is the liberal who came to her senses and walked away.

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News Television

MSNBC Staffers Concerned After Mehdi Hasan Show Is Canceled

“I think people are worried about why Medhi got benched.”

Eduardo Razo

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A logo for MSNBC

MSNBC canceled the weekend show hosted by Mehdi Hasan and will be moving him to an analyst and a fill-in host. There’s plenty of reaction from the news media over the decision, but Fox News recently reported the mood inside the network.

According to the reporting, an insider says that MSNBC staffers are profoundly disappointed and “worried about why” the network canceled Hasan’s program last week.

“Across the board [at the network], there’s deep disappointment at this. People there do operate in some awe of him, whether you agree with him or not. The guy’s brave, the guy says what is on his mind,” an MSNBC insider told Fox News Digital.

The Mehdi Hasan Show aired on Sundays at 8 PM ET. Additionally, he hosted a Peacock-exclusive program on Tuesdays. While the the network is shuffling their weekend lineup, staffers feel that they need more people like Hasan on MSNBC. 

“I think people are worried about why Medhi got benched, but they also think we need more Mehdi, not less,” the insider said. 

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News Television

Blake Burman: NewsNation Audience ‘Really Just Wants the News’

“There is an audience out there that really just wants the news, that wants to see what’s going on, and hear from both sides.”

Eduardo Razo

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A photo of Blake Burman
(Photo: NewsNation)

NewsNation will be at the center of news media this week, with the network hosting the fourth Republican debate on Wednesday at 8 p.m. ET in the University of Alabama’s Frank Moody Music Building in Tuscaloosa, Alabama.

For some tuning into the debate, it could be the first time they watch NewsNation programming. After the rebranding that allowed the network to launch in 2021, host Blake Burman notes the reaction he receives from viewers who have begun watching the network.

“Perhaps the most refreshing thing for me has been in the last few months how people have said to me a version of this: I just started to watch NewsNation, please keep doing what you’re doing,” Burman told TV Newser

“There is an audience out there that really just wants the news, that wants to see what’s going on, and hear from both sides when it comes to the latest events and when the conversations turn to politics.”

As a result, Burman doesn’t want his show to be like other networks where there’s tribalism. 

“One of my goals on The Hill is to try to give the audience a slice of what’s happening inside Washington, but also what’s going on outside the Washington bubble,” Burman added. “You’re going to hear from newsmakers, lawmakers, and panelists from both sides of the political aisle. 

“We don’t do the tribal group think. Rather, one of my goals is to make sure our audience gets a sense of what’s going on in the political arena and a feel for why we find it interesting. I can tell you this much: I am constantly listening throughout the show, because I am often hearing something for the first time I didn’t know before. I hope the audience gets a sense of that as well.”

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Newsmax Angry with RNC Over Lack of Republican Debates

When the RNC announced that NewsNation would sponsor the fourth debate, it left the executives at Newsmax fuming as they were still searching for an additional sponsor to split the costs.

Eduardo Razo

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A photo of the Newsmax logo

Newsmax clashed with the Republican National Committee over co-sponsoring a GOP presidential primary debate.

Axios reported that the RNC offered Newsmax as the junior partner to ABC News for the third debate after Fox News and Fox Business hosted the first two.

Nonetheless, executives hesitated to be a junior partner with a mainstream media outlet and thought the $2 million the RNC required the network to spend on the event was extreme. Eventually, that debate resulted in NBC News and Salem Media Group working together on the third debate.

Moreover, Newsmax was approached again to host the Republican debate. The RNC came to Newsmax to be the primary sponsor for the fourth GOP debate, which will take place in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, on Wednesday that ultimately went to NewsNation.

Still, the economics might have been an issue, as Newsmax would have had to spend approximately $4 million to produce the debate if they hosted it.

When the RNC announced that NewsNation would sponsor the fourth debate, it left the executives at Newsmax fuming as they were still searching for an additional sponsor to split the costs.

Axios obtained an email showing that executives from the conservative cable outlet were aware that the costs would vary based on the nature of the sponsors’ partnership, despite their belief that the RNC had changed the terms of their agreement.

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