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Fox News exec confirms it did peddle Sherrod story before she was fired

July 29, 2010 9:09 am ET by Eric Boehlert

It's always helpful when people inside Fox News confirm what Media Matters has reported as fact, even if the channel's outside defenders prefer to toil in conspiracy as they flail around desperately trying to make up excuses for Rupert Murdoch's channel. Not that I think this confirmation from inside Fox News will quiet the online boo birds, but it's worth noting now that they're claiming both Media Matters and Fox News are lying about the facts in the case. 

Good luck with that one guys. 

This by-now tiresome debate centers around whether or not Fox News jumped on Andrew Breitbart's bogus Shirley Sherrod smear campaign. We all know that on the day it broke online, Bill O'Reilly hyped the story on his primetime show, presented Sherrod as a racist, and demanded she "resign immediately." Of course, at the time O'Reilly didn't have the slightest clue what the whole story of the Sherrod tape was. But that didn't stop him from maligning a black women in the Obama administration. (O'Reilly later apologized to Sherrod.) 

So if O'Reilly was demanding Sherrod's ouster, that meant Fox News covered the story before she was forced out, right? Not quite. While his show tapes at 5 p.m., it doesn't air until 8 p.m., and Sherrod resigned shortly before 8 p.m. and July 19. So technically Fox News, or so the claim goes, didn't cover the story before she resigned and so all those people who claim Fox peddled the Sherrod attack are smearing Fox News! 

But of course, Fox News did peddle the story before Sherrod resigned. Fox News peddled the story online. And Fox News peddled it in two different online forums prior to Sherrod's resignation on July 19.

And in a new report from Politico, Fox News Senior Vice President of News Michael Clemente confirms that fact [emphasis added]:

 

But FoxNews.com did run a story about the existence of the video, titled "Video Shows USDA Official Saying She Didn't Give 'Full Force' of Help to White Farmer" at 5:58 p.m. on Monday, an hour before the Agriculture Department announced Sherrod’s resignation. And Wednesday, Clemente told POLITICO that was a mistake. 

"There was a breakdown in the system, and it is being addressed," he said. "But it must say something about the power of Fox, that a week after she resigned, we're still talking about this." 

The breakdown occurred following Fox's afternoon news meeting that day, when Clemente, according to The Washington Post's Howard Kurtz offered the following advice: "Let's take our time and get the facts straight on this story. Can we get confirmation and comments from Sherrod before going on-air. Let's make sure we do this right." 

Clemente said he gave the advice in the meeting, not in a memo to staff, and his guidance clearly did not make it down to the reporter and producers who put the story on FoxNews.com. 
 

And note this: 

Earlier in the day, Fox Nation, a news and opinion website run by Fox News, posted a YouTube version of the video under the headline," Obama Official Discriminates Against White Farmer," with a link to Breitbart's post. 

The first comment on the Fox Nation articles is at 1:43 p.m., about five hours after Breitbart posted the video to his site. 

And keep in mind a subsequent Foxnews.com article seemed to take credit for ousting Sherrod

The Agriculture Department announced Monday, shortly after FoxNews.com published its initial report on the video, that Sherrod had resigned.

So  yes Fox News defenders, please keep telling us how nobody connected with Fox News peddled the Sherrod story before she resigned. But just don't tell it to the SVP of Fox News, because even he's not buying it. 

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    • Author by IRONY 101 (July 29, 2010 9:11 am ET)
      3  
      "There was a breakdown in the system, and it is being addressed..."

      What...is FOX going out of business? Ailes being fired...what?
      Report Abuse
      • Author by rwmacdonald2091 (July 29, 2010 9:24 am ET)
        2  
        Fox is going to re-examine their "zero tolerance policy" on mistakes. Now don't get all excited that they are really going to have zero tolerance for mistakes, they are just going to look at it again.
        Report Abuse
        • Author by MidnightWriter (July 29, 2010 10:10 am ET)
          1  
          Silly liberal. Tricks are for Fox.

          And, from the start the Fox "Zero tolerance policy" has pretty much been one big trick. That memo was written after they had shown the wrong book cover (*gasp*) on a broadcast and said they would have zero tolerance for future "on screen" errors.

          So, pushing the wrong control button and bringing up the wrong image, well, that's bad, and may get you canned.

          A read of the memo pretty much shows it was intended as a smoke screen. Making a mistake or the telling of an out and out lie in the content of their broadcasts was not addressed.

          You can pretty much bet there was no mistake made in the way they worded that particular document.
          Report Abuse
    • Author by terrapin53 (July 29, 2010 9:24 am ET)
         
      MMFA you need to get your facts straight. O'Reilly said he owes her an apology. I never heard him give her an apoloigy. Did you?

      MMFA, I owe you a $10 donation. Have you received it yet? What's the difference between that and what O'Reilly actually said.
      Report Abuse
    • Author by dmhack (July 29, 2010 9:49 am ET)
      2  
      I love how he sees an upside and notes it says something about the power of Fox that people are still talking about the story.

      You sad little twerp... people are still talking about it because you guys failed in such a big way to do even the most basic research before running with the story.

      The only power Fox has is its never ending ability to lie, misdirect, and scare.

      It should be a point of shame that Shep is the only person there that can rightly be called a journalist.
      Report Abuse
    • Author by goesto11 (July 29, 2010 10:38 am ET)
      1  
      """But it must say something about the power of Fox, that a week after she resigned, we're still talking about this."""

      If Fox News cares this much about the buzz they're generating, why doesn't Glenn Beck just smother a kitten on tonight's show? That would guarantee weeks of conversation around the nation's water coolers.
      Report Abuse
      • Author by cst (July 29, 2010 10:48 am ET)
        1  
        ...Or encourage someone to shoot up the Tides Foundation...
        Report Abuse
        • Author by eb (July 29, 2010 10:58 am ET)
          1  
          "But it must say something about the power of Fox, that a week after she resigned, we're still talking about this."

          Yes the power of fox... to derail our national discourse ...
          Report Abuse

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  • County Fair is a media blog featuring links to progressive media criticism from around the Web as well as original commentary, breaking news and rapid response updates to major media events from Media Matters senior fellows and other staff.