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The Democratic Strategist

Political Strategy for a Permanent Democratic Majority

Republicans Seek Control of TV and Movies

In his latest opinion essay at The New York Times, Thomas B. Edsall reports on the Republican’s efforts to control America’s media. An excerpt:

While the Trump administration continues to attack free speech, criminalize adversaries and attempt to crush liberal foundations, conservative billionaires have acquired Paramount and CBS, stand in line to own Warner Bros. Discovery and are positioned to extend right-wing control of social media platforms well beyond Elon Musk’s X.

Larry Ellison, the multibillionaire who founded Oracle — together with his son David — is building a media empire rivaling that of Rupert Murdoch and his son Lachlan. This gives the Ellisons extraordinary power to shape the nation’s politics and culture, just as the Murdochs have for decades through Fox News, News Corp, The Wall Street Journal and The New York Post.

After winning approval from the Federal Communications Commission, Skydance Media, founded by David Ellison with financial support from his father, acquired Paramount for $8 billion on Aug. 7. The deal gave him command of one of the four major networks and one of the five major Hollywood studios, as well as of Comedy Central and Showtime.

On June 18, President Trump endorsed the Skydance acquisitionwhile it was pending before the commission, telling White House reporters: “Ellison is great. He’ll do a great job with it.”

…Two conservative companies, Sinclair and Nexstar Media Group, own, operate or provide services to 386 television stations, far more than any of their competitors. Nexstar has entered into an agreement to acquire Tegna, which, if approved by regulators, would push the total number of stations controlled by Sinclair and Nexstar to 450.

Nexstar currently reaches 70 percent of U.S. households, and that will rise to 80 percent if it wins approval of its purchase of Tegna’s 64 stations. Sinclair’s stations reach 58 to 66 percent of U.S. households, depending on the measure used.

At least two political science papers have reported that after Sinclair buys a television station and sets programming policy, the Republican share of the local vote rises by 3 to 5 percentage points. One is “Small Screen, Big Echo? Political Persuasion of Local TV News: Evidence From Sinclair” by Antonela Miho of the Paris School of Economics; the other is “How Does Local TV News Change Viewers’ Attitudes? The Case of Sinclair Broadcasting” by Matthew Levendusky of the University of Pennsylvania.

Read the entire essay here.

2 comments on “Republicans Seek Control of TV and Movies

  1. Victor on

    Censorship and specially self-censorship are major problems.

    Corporate owned media has shown itself to be unprincipled regarding free expression and the democratic peaceful transfer of power.

    Corporate alignment with liberal values of diversity and minority protection is wavering.

    At the same time, culture has deeper problems.

    Sarcasm, cynicism, moral relativism and nihilism are too dominant.

    Media targetting young people, special males, is mostly deeply skeptical about good and evil and the role of government.

    A good example is how the superhero genre, which grew so much the past few decades, has changed with the predominance of antiheroes and ambivalent messaging.

    Politics is indeed downstream from culture.

    Reply

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