Shep Smith's e-mail runneth over

Jun 22, 2009 14:24

Fox News Viewers' Emails To Shep Smith: "You Don't Belong Here"
Fox News Anchor Draws Ratings, and Ire of Conservative Critics
Shepard Smith, host of the evening show “The Fox Report,” has beaten his cable news competition for 92 straight months.
By Bill Carter
Published:  June 21, 2009
New York Times:

At various points on his Fox News program, the anchor Shepard Smith irritated Rush Limbaugh, teased Glenn Beck and grilled Samuel J. Wurzelbacher (a k a Joe the Plumber) over his attacks on President Obama. But it was not until he forcefully confronted the topic of hateful e-mail - some from Fox’s own viewers - that he drew fire over his approach.

On June 10, Mr. Smith was in the middle of three hours of coverage of the killing at the Holocaust Museum in Washington, in which officials identified an elderly anti-Semite as the killer. He then mentioned a prior warning by the Department of Homeland Security about right-wing extremist groups and connected that to the angry e-mail messages he had been receiving.

“When a crazy man has walked into a Holocaust museum and shot the security guard, maybe that’s an appropriate time to warn people: you’ve got a crazy person in your life, keep an eye on him,” he said in an interview in his Manhattan office last week.

Mr. Smith said he fully anticipated one result of those comments: the nasty e-mail increased.

“Thousands of them,” Mr. Smith said. “And I know they don’t mean the things they say. I know they don’t hate me and want death on my family.”

What they mostly say, he explained, is: “You don’t belong there.” Mr. Smith paused a moment before adding: “I do belong here.”

“Here” is the formidable Fox News Channel, the top-rated cable news network, in no small part because of Mr. Smith. While Mr. Smith does not draw the same attention as other evening anchors on the channel, his 7 p.m. show, “The Fox Report,” is having its best year, up 36 percent to almost two million viewers a night. He has beaten his cable news channel competition for 92 straight months. His coverage of the museum killing beat CNN and MSNBC combined.

So why do some Fox viewers believe he does not belong? Maybe because Mr. Smith has established a record that seems antithetical to the image Fox has earned as a purveyor of conservative orthodoxy. The channel has become the “voice of the opposition on some issues,” according to Bill Shine, Fox’s senior vice president for programming.

The liberal site Media Matters, a watchdog group that often zeroes in on Fox, seems nonplused by its leading anchorman’s apparent break from orthodoxy.

But one commenter on the site, quoting the network’s motto, wrote on June 12: “I don’t know if Smith is a conservative or a liberal, but it’s been clear for a long time that he’s the only one at Fox who takes the ‘fair and balanced’ thing seriously."


Mr. Smith’s bosses, including the president, Roger Ailes, are supporters. Mr. Ailes designated him the lead news anchor on the channel, signing him to a new three-year contract that has about a year and half left.

Andrew Tyndall, who analyzes newscasts for his online Tyndall Report, said by e-mail that Mr. Smith‘s predilection for insisting on facts is helpful to Fox News because his “tone is more important to Fox’s image than his ideology.”

The apparent “ideological disputes” between Mr. Smith and other Fox News stars “work not so much as a corrective to the hard party line,” Mr. Tyndall said, as “more of a complement to that line.”

Antipathy toward the Obama administration is certainly not hard to locate on Fox, especially on the network’s highly rated evening programs. The president himself said of Fox News last week, “You’d be hard pressed if you watched the entire day to find a positive story about me.”

He may not be catching Mr. Smith’s newscasts. The anchor has taken an unwavering stand against what he calls the “fantasy land” that some critics of Mr. Obama live in.

“It is the reporting of this news organization that Barack Obama is a citizen and he is not a Muslim,” Mr. Smith said, touching on a subject - Mr. Obama’s birth status - that has animated conspiratorial discussion in conservative circles, from relatively obscure far-right Web sites like Atlas Shrugs all the way up to the loudest mainstream conservative voice, Mr. Limbaugh.

Without specifically addressing Mr. Limbaugh (whom he said he enjoys), Mr. Smith said: “An unreasonable comment to me is beginning with a statement that is contrary to fact and moving on from that premise: ‘Barack Obama is not a citizen; he is a Muslim looking to take down the nation.’ When you begin with that premise, you are out of bounds.”

He said he was trying to counter “an ideological base” that argues: “The president is illegitimate. The country is off the rails. It’s been hijacked.”

Some of those points seem consistent with the message delivered nightly by Mr. Beck. Mr. Smith said he had a warm relationship with Mr. Beck. “He’s about the nicest guy in the building,” he said.

But Mr. Smith has had a little fun in the past with Mr. Beck’s occasionally florid rhetoric, once misidentifying what Mr. Beck called his “Doom Room” as the “Fear Chamber.”

Then there was Mr. Smith’s confrontation with Mr. Wurzelbacher. Mr. Smith pressed him on his claim that a vote for Mr. Obama would be a vote for the death of Israel.

“I just want to make this 100 percent perfectly clear,” Mr. Smith said, closing the interview. “Barack Obama has said and demonstrated repeatedly that Israel will always be a friend of the United States, no matter what happens once he becomes president of the United States. His words. The rest of it? Man, some things; it just gets frightening sometimes.”

He also argued against the imprisonment without trial of the terrorism suspect Ali al-Marri, and memorably banged a desk during another debate, saying: “We are America; we don’t torture. And the moment that is not the case, I want off the train.”

These positions have hardly endeared him to the conservative base. Mr. Limbaugh criticized Mr. Smith after the e-mail episode; so did Pamela Geller of Atlas Shrugs, who called him a “pompous elitist” and said on the site that he should be fired.

Whatever the criticism from outside, Mr. Smith said that, inside Fox, there is no conflict: “Relations in the building are perfect. Roger is 100 percent supportive.” And he said he continues to be “very happy at Fox.”

Of colleagues like Mr. Beck, Bill O’Reilly and Sean Hannity, Mr. Smith said, “There’s a lot of money in opinion, and those guys are fascinating, terrific entertainers. This is a news organization. There can’t be a Fox News without news.”

A previous version of this article incorrectly paraphrased Bill Shine, Fox's senior vice president for programming. He said the channel, not Shepard Smith, has become the "voice of the opposition on some issues."Sorry I bolded so much, there's so much good stuff in here :)
source

fox news, shepard smith

Previous post Next post
Up