Compilation of national news organization homepages taken during the 9 p.m. hour on Wednesday, May 27, 2020.
As the nation reached a tragic milestone on Wednesday evening in its battle against the coronavirus pandemic — 100,000 deaths — all the national news organizations marked the grim moment, unthinkable just months ago, as a front-page or A-block news. All of them, that is, except one: Fox News.
Instead, that cable news network’s online and TV programming treated the massive death toll more as an embarrassment or an inconvenient fly in the reopening narrative ointment, something to be noted obliquely, if mentioned at all, or quickly buried under scathing, misdirectional attacks on Dr. Anthony Fauci, the CDC, the liberal media, China, or Democratic politicians like New York Governor Andrew Cuomo. Anyone except President Donald Trump, whose name Fox News almost hermetically sealed off from the deadly consequences inflicted upon the country that he leads.
A quick snapshot of the national media’s online coverage during Wednesday’s prime time provided a perfect snapshot of this stark dichotomy. As the 9:00
Only if a curious Fox News fan scrolled all the way down past the top stories would he or she find a small photo of Covid-19 patients and and headline tucked under the “Health” section reading: “US coronavirus death toll crosses 100,000 in harrowing milestone.” Fox News had featured the death toll as the top online story earlier in the day, but dropped it down after roughly an hour.
On cable TV, this same trend continued, as networks CNN and MSNBC led off the top of each hour of Wednesday’s night programming with news
CNN’s Anderson Cooper 360 provided a clear example of the former, offering viewers a detailed, eight-minute-long chronology of the virus’ impact on the country over the past three-plus months— accompanied by a critical look at Trump’s evolving statements both dismissing the risk and constantly revising upward the final death toll.
MSNBC’s The Last Word with Lawrence O’Donnell situated the death toll amid the political context of the 2020 election and, not surprisingly for that channel, unfavorably contrasted Trump’s pandemic rhetoric with presumptive Democratic nominee Joe Biden’s. But it at least provided discussion around the fact that the country’s highest-in-the-world death toll was not unavoidable, and that other developed nations have successfully managed to have much lower fatality rates per capita with some having all but stopped the spread of the virus cold.
Such context and introspection was nearly impossible to find on Fox News, however.
On The Five, the death toll’s first mention arrived amidst a rant about Twitter fact-checking Trump by co-host Greg Gutfeld, who slammed the “blood libel” of “certain people on MSNBC saying [Trump] has 100,000 deaths on his hands.
Later on during The Five, when designated liberal Donna Brazile brought up the 100,000 figure again, co-host Dana Perino took the opportunity to effectively blame China for the pandemic’s singular effect on the United States.
“All of us would have had a lot more information if China hadn’t obscured and tried to prevent the rest of the world from knowing what was happening,” Perino said, in an at-times stumbling soliloquy that carefully employed the first-person plural to avoid mentioning Trump’s name even once.
“If China had — if they had been willing do what was right rather than to try to protect the Chinese Communist Party, we would’ve all had more information and we would’ve had it sooner and we might’ve been able to figure out a way to stop travel sooner, figure out a way to social distance sooner. We might already be reopened and we might not even have had to shut down. There is a lot of things that could have been known if we have the cooperation of China from early on.”
To their credit, Fox News’ pre-prime time news shows at 6 and 7 p.m. did cover the 100,000 milestone head-on, albeit in much briefer
Only during The Story with Martha MacCallum, in the 7 p.m. hour, did Fox viewers get a sense of what news consumers on other networks were hearing about the 100,000 death toll. In her final segment of the show, MacCallum offered a worthwhile examination of the milestone and the ongoing threat from the virus, particularly on African-American communities, in a conversation with Washington, D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser.
But this was but a fleeting high point of the night, as Tucker Carlson kicked off Fox News’ prime time with the neat trick of letting two rival networks obliquely report the 100,000 death total on air for him. In his only coverage of the pandemic’s milestone, he showed brief clips from CNN’s Cuomo Prime Time and a fiery exchange between CNBC contributors Aaron Ross Sorkin and Joe Kernen that both mentioned the nation’s fatality count reaching six figures.
But rather than actually address the grisly death toll himself, Carlson, both times, brushed past the inconvenient news and merely used the clips as handy foils for his ongoing argument that the
Cuomo, Carlson claimed, “shamed Americans for daring to step outside without a mask.” But in the clip, the CNN host singled out for criticism massive gatherings of people who were expressing violating CDC guidelines by not wearing masks or social distancing, like a now-infamous Lake-of-the-Ozarks pool party over the Memorial Day weekend that Missouri’s Republican governor later denounced. Cuomo was also shown also said: “Do you want to wear a mask? No. But is it that big of a deal? Not really.” Hardly an attempt at “shaming,” but Carlson’s takeaway, literally seconds later, was nonetheless: “So, you’re immoral if you don’t wear a mask.”
After the CNBC clip, the Fox prime time host, who had belittled Sorkin as “the screechy one,” went on to warn of “a crisis, as profound and dangerous a crisis as any war we’ve ever fought. God help us if we don’t fix it soon.” But lest you be confused, Carlson was not referring to the virus that has already taken 100,000 Americans and, by most official estimates, looks to claim tens of thousands more. Instead, he was blasting the “Chinese-style mass quarantine our leaders mindlessly adopted.”
That non-coverage wound down around 8:50 p.
On Thursday morning, as all those homepage headlines from Wednesday night arrived in print form on doorsteps across the country and led off morning shows on broadcast and cable TV, Fox News’ resounding silence about the nation’s Covid-19 death toll continued on Fox & Friends. In total, the show spent mere seconds over the course of three hours acknowledging the massive number of fatalities. And in a fitting denouement to the the network’s painfully awkward avoidance strategy over the previous 12 hours, co-host Brian Kilmeade barely had time to wipe the grin off his face after a jokey segment about
It was yet another bizarre moment in a daily news cycle where one network stood out for doing its best to tiptoe around the biggest news of the day.
Videos above via CNN, MSNBC, and Fox News.