Newsmax, OAN vie for Trump loyalists as Georgia votes
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[January 05, 2021] By
Helen Coster and Lisa Richwine
(Reuters) - As candidates face off in
Georgia on Tuesday in contests that will determine the balance of power
in the U.S. Senate, another race is underway between cable news networks
catering to conservative audiences.
For One America News Network (OAN) and Newsmax, the Georgia runoffs
present an opportunity to capitalize on post-presidential election
audience gains, which they’ve boosted thanks to promotion from President
Donald Trump. For weeks, the outlets pushed baseless theories about
election fraud in an effort to be number two behind dominant cable news
channel Fox News.
The elections will allow conservative media outlets to “see and tell the
next chapter in the continuing saga of Trump World and the amplifying of
the right wing cause,” said Frank Sesno, a former CNN correspondent and
director of strategic initiatives at George Washington University’s
School of Media and Public Affairs.
Trump ramped up his criticism of Rupert Murdoch's Fox Corp-owned Fox
News and began to promote Newsmax and OAN on Twitter instead, helping
the two outlets to the right of Fox grow. On Dec. 30 Trump tweeted:
“Watching @FoxNews is almost as bad as watching Fake News @CNN. New
alternatives are developing!”
However, the president still conducted his only two post-election
interviews on Fox News.
A DIVIDED CONSERVATIVE AUDIENCE
Georgia’s unusual runoff for two Senate seats will determine if
Republicans hold power in the chamber. OAN reporters will cover the
elections from Georgia, Florida and Washington, OAN President Charles
Herring said. Two of the network's reporters recently covered the
Georgia races from exclusive access inside Trump’s private club in
Florida, Mar-a-Lago, Herring said.
Newsmax will feature one of its Washington-based correspondents at
polling places in Georgia, and later at the headquarters of Republican
candidate David Perdue, as part of its all-day coverage from the state.
Commentators will include former Fox News political strategist Dick
Morris and former Georgia Republican lawmaker Jack Kingston.
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U.S. President Donald Trump departs on travel to West Point, New
York from the South Lawn at the White House in Washington, U.S.,
December 12, 2020. REUTERS/Cheriss May
Fox, which has invested heavily in its own system for analyzing voting behavior,
opinions and preferences, is the only one of the three networks that can make
its own election projections. The network’s live coverage from Georgia began
Sunday and includes two nights of a two-hour special on the runoffs. Fox will
air overnight election coverage from 1 a.m. until 4 a.m. EST.
Courting a divided conservative audience will be key to keeping viewers engaged
after the U.S presidential election, which helped Newsmax and OAN attract record
audiences. According to Nielsen data, Newsmax ended the year averaging 277,000
viewers per day in December, down from post-election peaks, but up from 60,000
before the election.
OAN President Charles Herring said the network’s audience swelled by more than
40 percent in the fourth quarter over the third quarter. The network does not
subscribe to Nielsen, and Reuters was unable to confirm the numbers.
Fox News’ audience was far bigger, averaging 1.9 million viewers per day in
2020. While it dominated cable news in primetime, with 3.6 million viewers on
average, its total day ratings have slipped below AT&T Inc’s CNN since the
election.
The question remains whether viewers who tune in this week will stick with the
upstarts when Trump leaves office, said George Washington University’s Sesno.
There will be an audience for their brand of right-wing coverage, he said. “I
think the question is how large? How rapt? Does it ever get old?”
(Reporting by Helen Coster in New York and Lisa Richwine in Los Angeles; Editing
by Kenneth Li and Aurora Ellis)
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