Of course they do. Nobody is arguing that. I am just stating that the perception of conservatives is that those networks lean decidedly to the Blue side.But they have the same right to that presentation as the AM talk stations have to theirs.
Yes, and when it was Steve Allen and Johnny Carson, they were "equal opportunity humorists" and poked fun at everyone. Not today.Late night shows have always made jokes about the government.
No, I never said anything of the sort. Go back and read again. I said that many conservatives base their impression of the political leaning of those three networks based on the content of the late-night talk shows which are highly anti-conservative.So you're saying the news departments base their coverage on late night talk?
No, and that is an offensive statement. You have no grounds to say that just because I am of a different political persuasion than you.Are you insane?
And I am talking about perceptions.These are two different divisions, run by different presidents, who are appealing to two different sales demographics. This is BUSINESS, not politics. Try to understand that there is more to this world than politics.
TelevisaUnivision did a number of studies and found that its news image, created by just one person, was giving the perception that the network was further to the left than the Mexican owners wanted it to be. So they removed the news anchor.
Then why did you detail its establishment (incorrectly, to boot)?It doesn't matter what it was established as.
Since the TV network has no news shows, that is just an assumption. There has not been a rumor of The Fox Network expanding into new areas or adding network hours for about two decades.If Murdoch wanted to force right wing politics on his TV stations, he could do it. But he KNOWS it would be a bad business decision.
They are not "his stations". His investment firms and a number of others bought the Audacy debt and converted it into shares.Just as Soros knows forcing left wing talk on his radio stations would be a bad BUSINESS decision.
As I said, in the last two decades they have stayed out of anything more than the couple of prime time hours and some sports. And the Rivers show was just like all the others at the time, and made fun of everyone, every party, every sports team, every celebrity.That's why he's kept his ideology off his OTA stations. Fox had a late night show with Joan Rivers. Her comedy was just like the other networks. It failed. They never tried it again.
They have asked about it, but have they done anything decisive? They seem to be probing, but not really exceeding their limitations.You said earlier that the FCC stays out of content. That changed in January.

