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At
the ‘Breitbart Embassy’ on Capitol Hill last week, Steve Bannon , the
ex-Chief Strategist at the White House now back at the alt-right
Breitbart news website, threw a book party for Laura Ingraham, the
conservative talk radio star who is poised to ascend to one of the
premier spots in American cable TV.
Battle hymns of the Republicans: Trump civil war is just getting started
When she makes her Fox News debut on Monday evening, in primetime, the
media and political establishment will be watching. And by hiring her,
it seems, Rupert Murdoch’s network has picked a side in the Republican
civil war.
Ingraham might as easily be considered an activist as an anchor. As the
longtime conservative radio host Charlie Sykes put it to the Guardian:
“She’s as hardcore a Trumpist as you’re going to find on the air.”
If
ties to Bannon were once a liability in Washington, in 2017 they appear
to have become an asset – and one Fox wants to cash in on as well. The
subtext, said Feldstein, now a professor at the University of Maryland,
is that Fox sees Trump’s base as its core audience.
During the recent Republican Senate runoff in Alabama, Ingraham threw
her support behind Roy Moore, the Bannon-backed insurgent, even as
Donald Trump backed the establishment incumbent, Luther Strange. On her
radio show before the vote, Ingraham asked Moore if he thought Trump
had become disconnected from his core constituency.
“I think that he may be,” Moore replied. “And I think that he’s being
badly advised out of the White House.”
Moore duly won.
When she takes over in Fox News’s 10pm hour, Ingraham will lay down a
markerfor the direction Fox is heading, and how closely it intends to
side with Trump in Bannon’s battle with the Republican “establishment”.
Asked recently if she would be bringing a Breitbartesque, hard-right
and nationalist-tinged approach to her show, she replied: “I don’t call
it Breitbart, I call it American.”
She also, it bears mentioning, offers Fox female star power at a time
when the network sorely needs it. Beyond the barrage of sexual
harassment claims, Fox recently lost star anchor Megyn Kelly to NBC
after Kelly antagonized Trump during the campaign with a tough line of
questioning around his treatment of women.
Ingraham was born in Glastonbury, Connecticut, where her mother worked
as a waitress. She attended Dartmouth, where she wrote for the
conservative student newspaper, then graduated from the University of
Virginia law school and clerked for the supreme court justice Clarence
Thomas.
She found her calling in the world of conservative radio and fashioned
herself as something of an honest broker. A prominent personality,
well-connected in Washington, she has her own following and a
reputation that has held up over time. She also offers Fox some sorely
needed female star power. There has been a barrage of sexual harassment
claims against high-profile male employees. Star anchor Megyn Kelly
recently moved to NBC.
Ingraham lives in a big house on a leafy street in Virginia. As such,
she may not seem an obvious pick to speak to America’s heartland. But,
she says, she never forgets her working-class roots. The latest of her
half a dozen books is titled: Billionaire at the Barricades: The
Populist Revolution From Reagan to Trump.
Murdoch was once thought to be ambivalent about Bannon, but he now
appears to be opening his arms to the former White House strategist and
his marshalling of forces set on destroying the “globalist” Republican
establishment.
Though Ingraham has been called “Trump before Trump”, she has said she
will not soft-pedal her coverage. In a recent interview, she said Trump
would likely be “irked”.
But when she does depart from Trump, she typically does so by moving
the discussion even further to the right. That is a different model to
that of Trump-pleasing Fox News anchors like Sean Hannity. According to
Angelo Carusone, president of the liberal thinktank Media Matters, it
is a move straight out of the Bannon playbook.
With Ingraham, he said: “When you think, ‘Wow, she’s just said
something that was not 100% in lockstep the president,’ you step back
to see what she said was actually worse and scarier and more extreme.”
The veteran investigative journalist Mark Feldstein said Ingraham’s
switch to Fox News primetime illustrates how transparent the alliance
between conservative media and the president has become.
“There’s actually a long history of journalistic commentators climbing
in and out of bed with politicians,” he said. “What’s interesting, is
how open this is.”
In a recent profile by the New York Times, Ingraham referred to the
president as a friend.
I met her at a book signing at Barnes and Nobel. What surprised me most
ReplyDeletewas how tiny she was. After a bunch of rounds of chemotherapy, her cancer
went into remission and she was humping it with the Marines in Iraq. Her helmet
and body armor were almost heavier than she was. Smart pretty and tough!
Smart pretty and tough!
ReplyDeleteWhat more can we ask?
'With Ingraham, he said: “When you think, ‘Wow, she’s just said something that was not 100% in lockstep the president,’ you step back to see what she said was actually worse and scarier and more extreme.”'
ReplyDelete"Scarier"? Hardly! The further Right things move, the less-scary our world seems. Our collective blood pressure has been much lower since Trump was inaugurated. We say inaugurated rather than elected because even after he was elected we weren't sure the Left wouldn't pull some shit to block his taking office.
ReplyDeleteLaura is wicked smart and I find myself almost totally agreeing with her. Having said that I would not have signed her up for a position at Fox and a show.
When Beck went off the rails and lost his mind, I started searching for another conservative to listen too during the same time slot. I jumped around trying different shows and found myself migrating back to Laura more and more. She carries a severe case of B'oreitis having to constantly jump on top and speak over the guest she has on her show and the never ending unhyphenated, droning, no breath, I'm already lost what she is asking, minute and a half freaking questions......she ask? Thinking that she is most important one that needs to be heard.
She also has a legendary reputation for being difficult to work for. The turn over of her show producers are evidence of it. Taking her staff to task for not having items available for when she calls for it.......over the air, no less. She hosts a "Talk Show" and always gives her audience the bums rush when the "finally" get on the air, hurrying them along, saying we are short on time. No kidding, after running her mouth with endless babble is what chewed up the time.
Personally I'm befuddled why she took the route of adopting three children to raise. All foreign born. Besides all the time she spends outside/away from the home, doing her side interest. Speeches, campaigning for pols, book tours, show appearances, she is a avid 'Bama fan who attends a lot of their games. It's due to all of this I would not have signed her to a contract with Fox {They already have enough prima donna's who work a 3 or 4 day work weeks with their names on shows}.
I wish her success with the show and I'm going to try her out. Her radio show became unlistenable too, so I moved on. I hope she doesn't repeat any of those mistakes with this endeavor.
Geo
Yes, I too wonder about people who adopt foreign-born kids. It smacks of virtue-signaling, which I thought was strictly a province of Liberals. Or maybe it's just conspicuous consumption; Libs don't have any exclusive on that.
ReplyDeleteGeo --
ReplyDeleteIf you're still looking for a 9-noon radio show, try Chris Plante. He's on WMAL. You can listen on their wmal.com, or after the show's over they have it as a podcast soon after it ends.
WMAL can also be found on IheartRadio.
He's chatty, but really funny, and sarcastic as heck.
ReplyDeleteDan, thanks for that. I've heard of Chris before and I've seen him on tv, he is really good. I'll give it a try, Thanks!
Geo