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Rupert Murdoch Believed Sean Hannity, Laura Ingraham ‘Maybe Went Too Far’ In 2020 Election Denials

“The emails, texts, and deposition testimony speak for themselves.”

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New emails uncovered in the Dominion Voting Systems defamation lawsuit against Fox News reveal Rupert Murdoch believed hosts on the network were reason rioters stormed the Capital on January 6th.

The election machine company released more than 6,500 pages of exhibits Tuesday, and while many are heavily redacted, some emails and text messages show the behind-the-scenes feelings of Murdoch, as well as Fox Corp. board member and former Vice Presidential nominee Paul Ryan.

In an email to Fox News CEO Suzanne Scott on January 21st, 2021, Murdoch asked “Is it ‘unarguable that high-profile Fox voices fed the story that the election was stolen and that January 6th an important chance to have the result overturned”? Maybe Sean (Hannity) and Laura (Ingraham) went too far.”

Murdoch then noted that Hannity had privately shared his disdain for Trump, but questioned “what did he tell his viewers?”

In a separate email exchange, Ryan told Murdoch “the sooner we can put down the echoes of falsehoods from our side, the faster we can get onto principled loyal opposition. I truly hope our contributors, along with Tucker (Carlson), Laura (Ingraham), and Sean (Hannity) get that and execute.”

Murdoch responded by saying “everything changed” on January 6th, adding Trump’s businesses were “ruined” before questioning if he could resign with the understanding that Mike Pence would pardon him.

“The emails, texts, and deposition testimony speak for themselves. We welcome all scrutiny of our evidence because it all leads to the same place — Fox knowingly spread lies causing enormous damage to an American company,” Dominion said in a statement.

In response, Fox News has continually pointed towards protections afforded in the First Amendment, alleging that Dominion has “cherry-picked” and “misrepresented” the contents of the emails and text messages.

“Thanks to today’s filings, Dominion has been caught red-handed again using more distortions and misinformation in their PR campaign to smear FOX News and trample on free speech and freedom of the press,” a Fox News spokesperson told Barrett News Media. “We already know they will say and do anything to try to win this case, but to twist and even misattribute quotes to the highest levels of our company is truly beyond the pale.”  

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News Television

CNBC Celebrates 35th Anniversary

What started as a U.S. operation has grown to several different divisions as CNBC holds branches in both Europe and Asia, and also has other international affiliates.

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On April 17th, 1989, the Consumer News and Business Channel signed on the air. Today, CNBC is marking its 35th anniversary.

The business news channel is celebrating its long cable news history today. A montage of highlights from the “biggest moments” was published in a video to X.

The outlet’s roots trace back to the Satellite Program Network which debuted in 1989, before later changing its name to Tempo Television. NBC decided to launch the business venture in 1989 in a 50/50 partnership alongside Cablevision with a headquarters located in Fort Lee, New Jersey.

After struggling to get carriage throughout the country, the network purchased the Financial News Network, which had more than double the reach of CNBC in 1991 after FNN filed for Bankruptcy.

At the time of the purchase, CNBC hired roughly 60 of the 300 FNN employees, including Joe Kernen, who still helms the channel’s popular Squawk Box morning show.

What started as a U.S. operation has grown to several different divisions as CNBC holds branches in both Europe and Asia, and also has other international affiliates.

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News Television

Jesse Watters: NPR CEO Katherine Maher Has ‘Perfect Resume’ For All The Wrong Reasons

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Fox News host Jesse Watters
(Photo: John Lamparski / Getty Images)

NPR CEO Katherine Maher has come under fire for past social media posts that show insight into her liberal political beliefs. Fox News host Jesse Watters believes that makes her the perfect candidate to run the public broadcaster.

While discussing the recent scuttlebutt from NPR employees and their responses to an op-ed from colleague Uri Berliner that claimed the network has a decidedly liberal bias, Watters pointed out that Maher fits right in as the chief executive of the organization.

“What do we know about this new NPR CEO Catherine Maher? She’s got the perfect resume. In 2016, she criticized Hillary (Clinton) for not being woke enough. In 2018, she declared that (Donald) Trump’s a racist. And she did it again in 2020,” said Watters.

“During the summer of love, she called all white people racist, and then kept the year off showing how excited she was to vote for Biden. That’s who NPR hired. You see, not only is she an avid lib, she’s a liar. She gave a whole TED Talk about working for Wikipedia and talked about how important different perspectives are.”

After playing a clip of Maher’s conversation about the importance of differing opinions and noting that debates make better ideas, Watters argued Maher doesn’t practice what she preaches.

“Berliner claims NPR newsroom had a ratio of 87 Democrats to zero Republicans. Doesn’t sound like much debate’s going on there,” the Jesse Watters Primetime host said.

Katherine Maher joined NPR as its new CEO in January after the retirement of John Lansing, after previously serving as the CEO of Web Summit and as the CEO of Wikimedia Foundation.

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News Television

OAN Settles Defamation Case with Smartmatic

As the case with Smartmatic comes to a close, OAN is still facing a separate defamation lawsuit from Dominion.

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After a defamation lawsuit was brought by voting machine company Smartmatic against conservative cable outlet OAN in 2021, the case has been settled.

An attorney for the right-wing outlet stated “The case has been resolved pursuant to a confidential agreement,” on Tuesday afternoon, according to a report from CNN’s Oliver Darcy.

After the 2020 presidential election was won by Joe Biden, conservative media organizations like Fox News, Newsmax, and OAN made claims or allowed claims from guests and contributors suggesting that companies like Smartmatic and Dominion Voting Systems had tampered with and interfered with the election. Famously, Dominion won a $787.5 million settlement from Fox News for its false claims.

While it has settled with OAN, Smartmatic is still in the midst of litigation against Fox News and Newsmax, as well as other pro-Trump figures.

The lawsuit is the latest settled by the network. In September of last year, it came to terms to end a lawsuit brought by former Dominion Voting Systems executive Eric Coomer.

As the case with Smartmatic comes to a close, OAN is still facing a separate defamation lawsuit from Dominion.

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