http://kcindymedia.org/newswire/display/2010/index.phpThe Fox News Network < Violating the Public Trust I
Village Voice
Published November 22 - 28, 2000
Fox calls itself "fair and balanced," but on the night of November 7, Fox election man John Ellis talked on the phone with cousins Jeb and Dubya Bush, then called Florida for Dubya around 2 a.m. A week later, Ellis's actions were reported in The New Yorker, whereupon he was accused of a conflict of interest and releasing confidential polling data. Ellis denied doing anything unethical, but the perception of bias touched a raw nerve at Fox.
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If bias is inevitable, what's to stop the reporters and businesses who control the airwaves from slanting the news to serve their mutual self-interest? "The election coverage is a microcosm
of everything wrong with American journalists," says Brian Karem, a former investigative reporter for Fox TV affiliate WDAF in Kansas City and, more recently, author of Spin Control. "Instead of being disinterested observers, we're right there in the thick of it with those in power. It's all one big, happy club."
Karem quit WDAF in 1998, after the station "watered down" his exposé on Dursban, a pesticide made by the Dow Chemical Company. Based on his experience, Karem believes Fox is partial to big business. "It's incredible that they think of themselves as a news organization," he says. "They slant the news and they do it their way. Rupert's never been objective about anything in his life. The only thing he respects is the almighty dollar sign."
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"Every news journalist has a bias," counters a Fox spokesperson. "The
trick is not to allow that bias to creep into what's being presented on the screen."