On Wednesday, Fox News Channel will present a full night of live coverage surrounding the Republican presidential primary debates from the Quicken Loans Arena in Cleveland. “Fox News Facebook Debate […]
Cable Should Let The GOP Candidates Debate
It will be easy this year to identify the biggest losers in the GOP debates. They will be the candidates who aren’t on the stage. With a record 17 prominent candidates vying for the Republican nomination (so far), no system for determining admission to the debate stage will please everyone. But the GOP can certainly do better than the statistically unsound procedures announced by Fox News and CNN.
Fox News Channel will host a candidate forum for Republican candidates who do not qualify for the network’s GOP debate on Aug. 6. “As we noted when we first announced the debate criteria, our intention has always been to provide coverage to the wide field of Republican candidates and we are glad to present these details today,” said FNC executive vice president of news editorial Michael Clemente. The forum, in Cleveland, will be moderated by Bill Hemmer and Martha MacCallum. It will be carried live on Fox News from 1 to 3 p.m. ET.
New York appeals court rules that Jana Winter gets the benefit of the state’s shield law and won’t have to divulge who leaked her news of James Holmes’ notebook.
Last week, the New York Times reported that Fox News had reached an out-of-court settlement with Brian Lewis, the former Roger Ailes aide who was abruptly fired in late July. Now, a Fox News executive with knowledge of the negotiations says that Lewis was paid approximately $8 million in hush money.
Jana Winter broke a worldwide scoop about the midnight massacre at a suburban Denver movie theater as part of her job for Fox News. Now she is the story — one whose next chapter will be written by the highest court in New York. On Tuesday, the Court of Appeals will hear arguments on whether Winter should be compelled to testify in Colorado to reveal the confidential sources behind her July 25, 2012, exclusive report.
Over the summer Roger Ailes was sitting on his terrace at his home along the Hudson River, reading a book on the Civil War, when he decided his fight wasn’t finished. Last month Ailes, 72, who created Fox News 16 years ago, signed on for another four years as CEO. In a wide-ranging interview he explains why.
Nielsen said today that an estimated 11.5 million people watched Obama and Romney tussle Monday night on foreign policy on Fox News Channel. The cable network’s previous record was the 11.1 million who watched the second presidential debate last week and the Joe Biden-Sarah Palin vice presidential debate in 2008.
(RTTNews) — Roger Ailes, chairman and CEO of Fox News, announced that Bret Baier has re-signed a multi-year deal with FOX News Channel or FNC where he will continue as […]
NEW YORK (AP) — Fox News Channel commentator Geraldo Rivera said Tuesday that he’s sorry for suggesting that a hoodie worn by unarmed Florida teenager Trayvon Martin was as much […]