Former Fox Exec Calls Network 'Poison For America' In Blistering Rebuke | HuffPost
Rupert Murdoch "owes himself a better legacy than a news channel that no reasonable person would believe," Preston Padden wrote. By Josephine Harvey07/05/2021 08:12 PM ET
A former top Fox Broadcasting executive has voiced a searing condemnation of Fox News, calling it "poison for America" and saying even the network's owner, Rupert Murdoch, doesn't believe its coverage.
"Rupert Murdoch, whom I served for seven years, has many business and journalistic achievements. He owes himself a better legacy than a news channel that no reasonable person would believe," wrote Preston Padden in an op-ed for The Daily Beast.
Padden served as president of network distribution at the Fox Broadcasting Company in the 1990s and played a role in the launch of Fox News, which was started with a goal to fill "an opening for a responsible and truthful center-right news network," he said.
But in recent years, he continued, things have gone "badly off the tracks at Fox News."
He accused the channel, particularly its prime-time opinion programming, of making a substantial and direct contribution to: COVID-19 deaths via vaccine and mask misinformation; societal divisions by stoking racial animus and spreading falsehoods about Black Lives Matter protests; former President Donald Trump's "Big Lie" about the 2020 election; and the violent Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol led by his supporters.
"Fox News has caused many millions of Americans — most of them Republicans (as my wife and I were for 50 years) — to believe things that simply are not true," he wrote.
Preston Padden has been in the media industry for more than two decades. In that time, he's served as an executive at Fox Broadcasting, ABC, the Walt Disney Company, among other organizations. (Manny Ceneta via Getty Images, 2001.)
He referred to polling that indicates a significant portion of Republicans blame "left-wing protesters" for the Jan. 6 attack. "Of course, that is ludicrous," he wrote. He also pointed to statistics that suggested two-thirds of Republicans believe or suspect the 2020 election was stolen from Trump.
"This ridiculous notion has been thoroughly refuted," Padden continued. "But millions of Americans believe these falsehoods because they have been drilled into their minds, night after night, by Fox News."
He said the "greatest irony" lay in his belief that most of the falsehoods on Fox News did not reflect Murdoch's own views. He added:
I believe that he thought that it was important to protect his own health by wearing a mask during the pandemic and he encouraged me to do the same. I believe that he thought that it was important to protect his own health by getting vaccinated at the earliest opportunity and he encouraged me to do the same. And I believe that he thinks that former President Trump is an egomaniac who lost the election by turning off voters, especially suburban women, with his behavior.
Padden, who currently serves as the principle of a consulting business and as an advisory board member for a private equity investment firm, said he had tried and failed over the past nine months to make Murdoch understand the damage Fox News is doing to America.
"I am at a loss to understand why he will not change course," he said.
Fox News did not immediately respond to HuffPost's request for comment.
Personalities at the network are known to spout dangerous and misleading claims about the coronavirus pandemic and 2020 election, manufactured and divisive political controversy, white supremacistrhetoric and revisionist history about the Jan. 6 Capitol riot, among other false and misleading claims.
I could have told you that...
Fox news is fake news....
People who watch Fox News are less well informed than people who eschew watching news altogether.
I found Laura Ingram's shawl...
Urp! Yep, that caused a patented Ingram gag reflex...
Really good article, thanks for posting it. And I am off to bed.
Probably the best description of fox news I heard was..
"Fox news doesn't tell lies, they omit certain truths to skew stories to the right.."
if the mannerism, order, and method of words, is purposely portrayed in an inartful color form that draws certain magnetized outfits to it, so asz, it gravitates peep holes to bounce off the truth as they dance around planted polls lookin to Phil wholes in the whistled past grave circumstance meters of yards, in the back of, are mind...