Conservative News Daily

Fox News issues demands ahead of GOP debate, threatens legal action against violators.

Fox News⁤ Imposes Restrictions​ on‍ GOP Debate Coverage

Fox News is taking a page out of the left-wing media’s playbook ⁣with a new rule for the first ‍Republican‌ primary⁢ presidential‌ debate,‍ which‌ is ​slated to air on Fox News on Wednesday.

The media⁢ outlet put out an advisory stating that for‌ seven days from the date‌ of ⁢the debate, no other media outlet would⁣ be allowed to air more than​ three minutes of⁤ excerpts from the ⁤debate in any‌ one program, including video and audio.

The​ relevant portion of​ the advisory was read‌ aloud⁣ by a very annoyed Ben Shapiro on “The Ben⁢ Shapiro Show.”

“They’re out of their minds. That’s totally crazy. They’re treating this like a football game or like a baseball game, which is‍ nuts,” Shapiro said.

“This is newsworthy material involving the presidential candidates, the people that are ‍going to represent you at the top levels of⁣ government,​ and Fox News is saying that​ you’re not allowed to hear from them unless you watch the debate⁣ live or unless you’re⁣ watching Fox News,” Shapiro ⁤continued.

Shapiro explained that when ⁢people like him attempt to ⁤recap the debate​ to explain what happened, Fox ⁣News is threatening to sue them.

“How the hell ‍is anybody supposed ⁤to actually figure out⁣ what happened in the debate unless they watch⁤ the thing live?” Shapiro continued, pointing out that the real reason for this is that Fox News wants​ to telescope all viewers onto their channel.

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Fox News is just beginning to recover viewership after a devastating⁢ drop in numbers following ⁣the ousting of their biggest‌ primetime star, Tucker Carlson.

In May, a‌ month after Carlson’s departure, ‍Fox News averaged 1.42 million ‌viewers during primetime, a 37 percent decrease from the same ‍month in‌ 2022, according to‌ Deadline.

In the⁢ key 25-54 demo,‍ Fox did ‍even⁢ worse, dropping a whopping 62 percent from the previous⁤ year.

After a ⁤desperate reshuffle of‍ programming, ‍which resulted in host Jesse Watters taking over ⁢the 8 p.m. ‍slot,‍ Laura Ingraham ‍moving from 10 p.m. ​to 7 p.m., ‌and Greg Gutfeld moving from late night to the 10 ⁣p.m. hour,⁤ the network has ⁣begun to buoy — thanks in part ​to an⁤ interview with former President Donald Trump on “Hannity,” which ⁢rated as the No. 1 cable ​show during the week of July‍ 17 with an⁤ average of 2.84⁢ million viewers, according​ to ⁢ Forbes.

But now Fox seems‍ to be acting like an over-possessive husband, refusing⁤ to ‍let ⁣their content leave the house.

The network, ‍which‌ during⁤ Democrat administrations ‍constantly complained that it was not given⁣ fair access, is now denying it⁤ from other, much⁣ smaller players.

For instance, in 2009, the‌ Obama administration ⁤attempted to⁣ exclude Fox News from interviews with executive pay czar Kenneth Feinberg despite extending invitations ⁣to reporters from major networks ⁣like the Big Three and CNN.

At that point, journalists from other⁢ networks ​rallied‌ to Fox’s defense. ⁣Jake‌ Tapper,‍ who was with ABC News at‌ the ‍time, referred to Fox as “one of our sister ​organizations.

Ironically,⁣ the back‍ and forth‍ with Obama drew audiences to Fox ⁢at that time — in many ways.

Now, Fox, arguably the top dog in establishment media ⁤news,⁤ instead of ⁣lifting up newer ‌news providers having been in their shoes, is attempting⁢ to shut them ⁣out from being​ able to fairly report and explain the news. ‍But​ it may well‌ backfire on them.

By‍ restricting access to the debate unless you watch it live, Fox may have ⁢been trying to take viewership away from⁤ Tucker⁢ Carlson’s online show. Carlson struck⁣ gold, securing a one-on-one interview on X, formerly called ‌Twitter, with former ⁣President Trump, ⁣who ⁢decided ⁤to⁣ snub the Fox debate.

However, Shapiro thinks Fox’s ⁤strategy may backfire in the long​ term.

“What ​Fox is ​doing here right now actually helps Trump, and it helps Tucker, ​ironically,” Shapiro said on his podcast. “Because, ‍by restricting the ability of other people to engage⁤ with​ the newsmaking that they ⁣are doing in this debate,⁣ this ‌gives a leg up to Trump and Tucker, who are putting⁣ all their stuff‌ out ⁢for ⁢free on X/ Twitter.

“All their stuff is now available to everyone, which gives Trump a ‍leg up … and Fox News a leg down,” Shapiro continued.

“I understand that‌ Fox is trying harder and harder to ‍its⁤ declining user base, but I gotta say, this should be relevant information … classic fair use kind of⁣ stuff⁣ for​ conservatives all over the country.

“For Fox to restrict access to your ‍ability to listen to clips of ⁤the debate with commentary, which is the normal way that fair use works, threatening​ litigation against everybody else is pretty insane.”

The post Fox News Releases List of Demands Right Before GOP Debate, Threatens to Sue Violators appeared first on The Western Journal.



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