Well My Fox O&O KTVU San Francisco on the Topic of Climate Change does not side with the President Trump.
http://www.ktvu.com/news/global-warming-has-contributed-to-wildfire-intensity-stanford-expert-says
http://www.ktvu.com/news/politics/e...s-about-california-wasting-water-during-fires
But then again Jack Abernethy the leader of Fox O&O division made rules that protect the local News Directors and staff from caving into the national politics that the national Fox News is known for.
News Corp, and the Murdochs in particular, are astute business people. Turning KTVU into a Fox News clone in the liberal Bay Area would be VERRRRRRRRRRRY bad for business. KTVU only became a Fox O&O about 3 years ago - previously it was a Cox station, and their news department had received great respect and critical acclaim for decades. Fox is smart enough not to throw that all away.
Other than evolutionary change in the news department since the Fox takeover (the occasional new anchor, news sets), the only change I can think of is that "KTVU Channel 2 News" was re-titled "KTVU Fox2 News". That's it.
People forget that even the national Fox News network is not an impregnable right-wing monolith. Even nationally, there are a few exceptions, such as Shep Smith, who is clearly liberal.
Very recently the reason that KTLA Los Angeles didn't go to Sinclair was because LA Viewers felt that the station that made Larry McCormick and Hal Fishman legends would turn into a Trump propaganda outlet. Plus the notion that Sinclair uses Sidecar companies as in Cunningham and Deerfield stopped that deal from taking place by the FCC and DOJ.
Now Back to Fox the Reason why KTVU went to Fox O&O because the network wanted revenue access to 49ers games though when they made a PR explanation on that.
Hal Fishman hid it well the last couple of decades as LA's beloved old grandpa anchorman, but he was a right-winger. He started in TV as a right wing commentator - billed as "Dr. Harold Fishman" in the 50's. Then he joined the George Putnam News on KTLA in the 60s. Putnam, as older Angelinos know - was a decades long right-wing commentator, on TV, then later radio until he died just a few years ago - with a deep voiced pompous delivery. The Ted Baxter character on the Mary Tyler Moore show was based on Putnam. If George were alive today, he would no doubt be a Fox News anchor. Fishman was his co-anchor for many years, first on KTLA, then KTTV, then back to KTLA again. Larry McCormick joined Putnam and Fishman as the weatherman around 1970, though as far as I know, McCormick was not conservative.
Don't forget Wally George of KDOC-TV Los Angeles he was straight up Donald Trump before the Current President even considered how his rallies would be popular 35 years later.
If Wally George was Alive today he would either do a Youtube show or a segment on Sinclair News.
News Corp, and the Murdochs in particular, are astute business people. Turning KTVU into a Fox News clone in the liberal Bay Area would be VERRRRRRRRRRRY bad for business. KTVU only became a Fox O&O about 3 years ago - previously it was a Cox station, and their news department had received great respect and critical acclaim for decades. Fox is smart enough not to throw that all away.
Other than evolutionary change in the news department since the Fox takeover (the occasional new anchor, news sets), the only change I can think of is that "KTVU Channel 2 News" was re-titled "KTVU Fox2 News". That's it.
People forget that even the national Fox News network is not an impregnable right-wing monolith. Even nationally, there are a few exceptions, such as Shep Smith, who is clearly liberal.
Pretty much all local news has the same biases:
Economic development good, factories closing bad.
Firefighter saves puppy good, humane society begging for donations of food bad
Incumbent politicians get free air time whenever (e.g. a sitting mayor or sheriff will be involved in legit stories just about every week), challengers usually do not get as much time.
And oh yeah - if it bleeds it leads.
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When it comes to national politics, the stations will more or less have the same biases as their networks and/or ownership. Because most of their coverage of Washington will come from the networks Washington bureau - and some groups have their own Washington bureau (Nexstar, Tribune, probably others). Although it is worth noting that, in 2016, Donald J. Trump gave a lot of interviews to local newscasters. Likely in hopes of generating hoopla locally, but it is plausible that the Trump campaign thought such interviews would be less contentious simply because these guys in local news are less well versed in Gotcha! journalism.
Don't Forget Gentrification that its like third rail city politics that gets covered a lot on Local news especially in San Francisco and it collides with the national talk of Income inequality. Plus School District budget meetings they take on the local version of whats happening in congress in some areas.
Well My Fox O&O KTVU San Francisco on the Topic of Climate Change does not side with the President Trump.
http://www.ktvu.com/news/global-warming-has-contributed-to-wildfire-intensity-stanford-expert-says
http://www.ktvu.com/news/politics/e...s-about-california-wasting-water-during-fires
All the News Director and staff at KTVU Fox 2 News has to do here is do a wildfire update and talk to Calfire officials, Environmental studies experts and victims in the area that had to flee a wildfire and get lung problems in the process because of the wildfires. KTVU Fox 2 News does not do interviews with Coal leaders or the President when it comes to Climate change issues due to the fact that the majority of Fox2's audience do care about environmental concerns.
But then again Jack Abernethy the leader of Fox O&O division made rules that protect the local News Directors and staff from caving into the national politics that the national Fox News is known for.
Sinclair’s CEO CEO Chris Ripley said that the company could look at acquiring 14 TV stations currently owned by Cox.
Ripley said Sinclair wants to be one of the last few remaining broadcasters after consolidation.
"We are absolutely in the market for broadcast stations," Ripley said. "From an FCC perspective there is nothing that prevents us from moving forward on future license transfers. We are actively looking at opportunities as we speak and preparing for bigger opportunities like the one I mentioned earlier, Cox."
One Cox staffer tells FTVLIve that this is, “sending chills up the spines of everyone working at Cox Media Group.”