Matt Norcross — who fancies himself to be the “Carolina Culture Warrior” — has a new post at the Media Research Center’s NewsBusters blog attacking the idea of CBS-owned Showtime making a miniseries about Roger Ailes’ final days as head of Fox News.
Norcross complains that the series “will draw on reporting from far-left New York magazine writer Gabriel Sherman, who had several major scoops related to the sexual harassment scandal that led to Ailes’ ouster last summer.” At no point does Norcross support his assertion that Sherman is “far-left” (another example of the MRC indiscriminately tossing around the descriptor) beyond him reporting on Fox News, and even then he offers no evidence Sherman has ever gotten anything wrong.
Norcross then grumbles:
One of the reasons you know this is going to be a hit-piece on the only news organization that – unlike CBS – reports stories that Middle America cares about, such as political corruption, illegal immigration, and terrorism threats from radical Islamists. Another reason is because one of the writers and executive producers is Tom McCarthy, the director of the anti-Catholic film Spotlight.
Norcross’ assertion that only Fox News covers “political corruption, illegal immigration, and terrorism threats from radical Islamists” is stunningly ignorant, especially given that just a few days earlier on his own blog, he apologized for writing posts that were “over the top, and … generalized a group of people” and said he would have to clean up his act in writing for the MRC.
Also, “Spotlight” was not “anti-Catholic” — if it’s anti-anything, it’s anti-child abuse and anti-covering up said abuse. (The MRC whined about the film’s mere existence.) It’s “anti-Catholic” only in the sense that it was Catholic Church officials who were doing the covering up.
After noting that former Fox News hosts Megyn Kelly and Gretchen Carlson had lodged harassment complaints against Ailes, Norcross wrote: “To be fair to Carlson and Kelly, their cases against Mr. Ailes are chilling. No woman deserves to be treated like they say they were in the work place. With that said, Ailes was one person. And what he did should not be painted on the network as a whole.”
Norcross hasn’t been watching Fox News very closely, has he? Fox News was Ailes’ brainchild, and it brought us innovations like female hosts in short skirts, the “leg cam” and, yes, a culture that clearly condoned sexual harassment. Ailes created all of this, so it’s nonsensical to separate him from it and dismiss his behavior as the work of a mere employee.
You know who else blames Ailes for all this? Fox News media critic Howard Kurtz, who explicitly states Fox News is trying to “change the culture” post-Ailes.
Norcross curiously doesn’t mention Bill O’Reilly’s history of paying millions of dollars to settle sexual harassment claims, even though that’s very much in the news right now and something that was obviously condoned under Ailes.
Norcorss added: “Before she signed off from her job to join NBC, Kelly actually thanked the network, and even said that her colleagues were like a second family to her, especially the Murdochs – the controlling family of parent company 21st Century Fox.” As if that somehow made Ailes’ alleged harassment of her all better.
Norcross then ranted:
CBS, Showtime, Tom McCarthy, and others are still furious that Hillary Clinton lost the 2016 election. As a result, they are taking it out on the majority of the American public they are supposed to cater towards, and especially the only major news organization that had the courage to cover it all without favor or prejudice.
Hollywood has now proven itself as doing anything it can to destroy the conservative movement in the United States, including the one news network that treats it without prejudice.
Norcross forgets that if Fox News didn’t have this extensively documented culture of sleaze and harassment, there would be no miniseries to make.