“Get your facts straight!”
Fox News anchor Chris Wallace, right, at a Fox News Channel Town Hall with Democratic presidential candidate Pete Buttigieg, left. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik)
A Fox News contributor was called out Monday and told to get her “facts straight.” Who called her out? A Fox News anchor. On the air.
Chris Wallace had a testy exchange with Katie Pavlich during the network’s coverage prior to Monday’s Senate impeachment hearing. Pavlich said, “The Senate is not the House, the House did not come with a complete case, and every impeachment beforehand, the witnesses that were called had been called in the House before being brought to the Senate. So there are questions here about the process.”
Wallace wasn’t having it as he interrupted Pavlich.
“That’s not true, that’s not true,” Wallace said. “They hadn’t all been called in the House, and in the Clinton impeachment, they’d been called by the general independent counsel. They had not been called by the House.”
The conversation continued with Wallace continuing to challenge Pavlich. During his closing thoughts, Wallace again called out Pavlich.
“So to say that in the Clinton investigation these people were interviewed by the House, one, they weren’t. And to say it wasn’t done by the Justice Department, because the Justice Department refused to carry out the investigation. Get your facts straight!”
At that point, Fox News’ Bret Baier had to jump in and say, “OK, let’s tone it down.”
Interviewing the president
Fox News host Sean Hannity (AP Photo/Frank Franklin II)
Fox announced last week that Fox News’ primetime star Sean Hannity has been tapped to conduct the Super Bowl pregame interview with President Donald Trump.
The initial reaction is why Hannity? He is clearly biased in favor of the president and, perhaps, Bret Baier or Chris Wallace would be better choices given that both have reputations of being way more objective than Hannity. Now, Fox News could argue that Hannity is a natural choice because he has cable news’ most-watched primetime show. In other words, he is their biggest star.
One guess as to why Hannity gets the gig is that Trump wanted Hannity. Another is it shows how powerful Hannity is at Fox that he could elbow his way into the interview even though he isn’t trusted as a reliable interviewer by millions who might be watching.
The interview is expected to be pre-taped. Hannity told Variety’s Brian Steinberg that he expects the interview to last 10-15 minutes, although a portion may end up running on his Fox News primetime show.
Hannity told Steinberg that he will touch on topics such as impeachment, the economy and foreign affairs, but that he also expects to talk about football.
Hannity said, “I want to make sure I put myself in the position of somebody at home, hanging out with friends and waiting for the game to start.”
The 19th
The 19th — a new nonprofit, nonpartisan newsroom reporting at the intersection of gender, politics and policy — had a soft launch of its website on Monday.
The site is the brainchild of Emily Ramshaw and Amanda Zamora. Ramshaw is the former editor-in-chief of The Texas Tribune and Zamora was the chief audience officer there. (It also should be noted that Ramshaw is a member of Poynter’s National Advisory Board.) The name of the site comes from the 19th Amendment
Ramshaw told The Washington Post’s Sarah Ellison, “It seems like there was a niche nonprofit newsroom for almost everything, and I wondered to myself why no one had created one at the intersection of women and politics.”
The site will launch in full in August. Until then, The Washington Post’s website will publish its articles.
Remembering Kobe
The newest edition of HBO’s “Real Sports with Bryant Gumbel” will debut tonight at 10 p.m. Eastern and will include a retrospective segment on Kobe Bryant. It will also include part of a 2000 feature reported by James Brown when Bryant was just in his fourth season and a 2016 profile by reporter Andrea Kremer as Bryant’s playing career was coming to an end and he was transitioning to business/media.
The show also will include a Soledad O’Brien profile of sportscaster Erin Andrews and a look at Japan getting ready to host the 2020 Summer Olympics nearly a decade after the tragedy at Fukushima, where an earthquake and tsunami triggered a nuclear meltdown and explosion.
By the way, hard to believe, but “Real Sports” will celebrate its 25th anniversary in April. Tonight will be the 274th edition of the program.
So you wanna be president?
MSNBC “Hardball” host Chris Matthews launched a new podcast Monday called “So You Wanna Be President?” It’s a six-episode series that will dig into what it will take to win the Democratic nomination. Guests will include commentators such as Wall Street Journal columnist Peggy Noonan and “PBS NewsHour” anchor Judy Woodruff.
Matthews told the Philadelphia Inquirer, “I think it’s a chance to settle down with some people who can let you know what happened in the back room, offer little more perspective, and give (listeners) a sense of the decisions and mistakes that are made during campaigns that make all the difference.”
Media tidbits
- NBC “Nightly News” anchor Lester Holt will be a guest on tonight’s “Late Night with Seth Meyers.”
- TV ratings of networks covering the news of Kobe Bryant’s death on Sunday were way above normal. John Ourand from Sports Business Daily reports that ESPN2’s Sunday ratings were up 758%, while NBA TV’s ratings were up 560%.
Hot type
Kobe Bryant in 2016. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer, File)
Have feedback or a tip? Email Poynter senior media writer Tom Jones at [email protected].
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