Tucker Carlson needed a distraction from a wealth of bad news, and the Media Research Center was more than happy to help give him one.
When Carlson ranted about an upcoming New York Times story on him that he claimed would print his home address, Nicholas Fondacaro was all too willing to help him play the victim:
Fox News host Tucker Carlson closed out Monday’s edition of his show on an extremely serious note that pertained to the life and safety of his wife and four kids. For over two minutes, he exposed how the radically leftist New York Times had assigned a so-called “journalist” and photographer to hunt him down, find out where he lives, and print it for all his haters to find him. And according to Carlson, their mission was nearly complete with the publication happening later in the week.
[…]This time, Carlson was fighting back, calling out the people targeting him by name. “The paper has assigned a political activist called Murray Carpenter [pictured above] to write a story about where we are now. They’ve hired a photographer called Tristan Spinski to take pictures,” he informed the world.
After noting that the story was “slated to run in the paper this week,” he blasted Times editors for knowingly putting the lives of his wife and kids in danger. “I called them today and I told them. But they didn’t care. They hate my politics. They want the show off the air. If one of my children gets hurt because of a story the wrote, they won’t consider it collateral damage. They know it’s the whole point of the exercise,” he exclaimed.
He added: “To inflict pain on our family, to terrorize us, to control we say. That’s the kind people they are.”
Carlson offered no proof whatsoever of his claims, but Fondacaro didn’t care — he was just a slavishly willing stenographer, even helping Carlson with his alibi:
The Fox News host also predicted the sleazy paper would deny his claims, and he was correct. “While we do not confirm what we may or may publish in future editions, the Times has not and does not plan to expose any residence of Tucker Carlson’s, which Carlson was aware of before tonight’s broadcast,” they told left-wing Mediaite.
Carlson followed up by turning the situation around on The Times. “So how would Murray Carpenter and his photographer Tristan Spinski feel we told you where they lived, if we put pictures of their homes on the air,” he asked, also calling out media editor Jim Windolf. “We could do that. We know who they are.”
Fondacaro demonstrated that he’s not a serious “news analyst” with his ridiculous description of the Times as “radically leftist.” But then, he’s a liar who apparently has Brent Bozell’s approval to lie for the MRC.
Fondacaro was also careful to censor the fact that Carlson’s distracting attack on the Times came not only a couple weeks after Carlson was forced to fire his head writer,. Blake Neff, after he was exposed as a racist and misogynist (news the MRC has largely censored) but also came the very same day as news of the filing of a lawsuit against Carlson, Sean Hannity and other Fox News personalities alleging sexual harassment.
After Carlson’s segment — and Fondacaro’s fawning defense — appeared, Carlson’s fans did what Carlson said he hinted he would do and spread the addresses and personal information about the Times reporters, upon which the fans targeted them with harassment and threats. We can assume that Fondacaro was cheering when he read about that, so irrationally obsessed is he with destroying a newspaper that fails to fawn over President Trump, Carlson and other right-wingers the way he does.
So in thrall was Fondacaro to Carlson’s far-right charms — and so consumed with rage at the Times, as MRC employees are inculcated into being — that he took his rage to his personal Twitter account, where he lashed out further at the Times. Responding to a post from the Times repeating its statement that it never planned to publish Carlson’s address, Fondacaro hissed, “Lies. This paper is a rag for extremists.”
Needless to say, Fondacaro is lying again. He has no proof the Times is lying, and only a right-wing extremist like Fondacaro would nonsensically screech that the paper is “a rag for extremists.”
In another tweet, Fondacaro ranted further: “Note the tacit admission that they (via @Murray_journo) did hunt down Carlson and have his address. NOW, they say they’re not going to publish it. But they’ll probably just leak it because they hate him so much and want to see him hurt. The Times are a bunch of thugs.” More lies — Fondacaro bizarrely thinks it suspicious that a reporter would have the address of the person he’s writing about. And Fondacaro’s acting more like a “thug” than anyone at the Times.
Even after all that, Fondacaro was not done spewing his rage. When the Washington Post’s Erik Wemple did an article on the story a few days later pointing that Carlson’s accusation that the Times was publishing his address was false, Fondacaro harrumphed: “They’re not false accusations you hack. Just because he got them to stop doesn’t mean the slimebags at the Times weren’t planing to expose where he lives. You really shouldn’t be writing about Tucker anyway since you have a lot of personal animosity towards him given history.”
Again, Fondacaro offered no evidence that Carlson’s accusation was “not false” or that he “got them to stop,” making him a liar yet again. ANdf it’s hilarious that Fondacaro — who is so clearly and utterly filled with rage and personal animosity toward everyone he writes about — lecturing Wemple about the issue.
Fondacaro repeated his lie again in a tweet to CNN’s Brian Stelter — who Fondacaro has even more personal animosity for — when he promoted Wemple’s story: “Just because he called them out and got them to stop doesn’t mean they weren’t planning to do it. Even if they didn’t publish the address in full, they would’ve given enough detail to put the Antifa terrorists on his trail. Stop making caveats and just admit it’s wrong.” Once again, Fondacaro offered no evidence to back up his claim.
Fondacaro had some harassment help this time, from MRC co-worker Curtis Houck. He was less ranty than Fondacaro, but Houck was clearly writing from the MRC’s right-wing bubble, where Fox News is perfect and everyone else is evil. Targeting Stelter — the CNN-deranged writer was not following his co-worker’s instant rules about writing about someone with whom you have personal animosity — Houck huffed: I’m all but certain Brian and Erik know that even publishing pictures of #Tucker’s house would be more than enough for Antifa and other lefty mobs in their base to find their address. They get rightfully upset when they’re harassed, but they don’t care when it’s not their side.” As far as we can tell, Houck joined Fondacaro in being silent about the doxxing and harassment of the Times journalists, so we can assume he approves of that and is simply offering token criticism here.
Houck asserted in another tweet at Stelter: “#Tucker has every reason to be worried about his family, but it’s all a game for Brian and Erik. A family with a history of Antifa coming to their house and threatening them would be reason to be concerned, but Brian doesn’t care.”
Actually, it’s a game to Houck and Fondacaro too. They just want to destroy, and they don’t care whose lifes are ruined, as long as it’s not on their side.
The MRC has pretty much stopped being about “media research” and is pretty now just a rage-blog spewing hate at anyone who tells the truth about Carlson, Trump and any other right-wingers.
UPDATE: As blogger Oliver Willis pointed out, Carlson is being utterly hypocritical about his house being potentially exposed, since he apparently had no problem with other publications writing about his purchases of other homes in which a way that are easy to find.