As the Delta coronavirus variant sweeps across the United States, the best hope for a reprieve may be to persuade vaccine holdouts to get the shot. But at least one Fox News host is really, really displeased with such efforts.
The podcast of Fox host Will Cain is not filled with anti-vaccine arguments; Cain says on multiple occasions that he has received the Johnson & Johnson vaccine. But the Fox & Friends Weekend co-host nevertheless uses the podcast to decry vaccination efforts.
He portrays vaccination advocates as cows “mooing,” suggests that vaccination efforts are born out of “mental illness,” complains that people questioning the effectiveness of the vaccine were portrayed as conspiracy theorists, defends Joe Rogan for suggesting 21-year-olds do not need vaccines, warns that vaccine requirements are creating a new caste system in the United States, and says that COVID-19 numbers are being inflated.
Cain denies that he’s an anti-vaxxer, and, indeed, he doesn’t actually present any arguments for or against vaccines; the only argument he offers is that we don’t know the yearslong effects of the vaccines given how new they are. (When he speaks about vaccination, Cain talks a lot about the possible long-term impacts of the vaccine, but rarely if ever about the long-term effects of COVID-19.) But instead of explaining potential objections to getting vaccinated and grappling with them — or explaining why he chose to get vaccinated — Cain just spends a lot of time bemoaning efforts to persuade others to take the vaccine.
Cain’s style melds two different approaches. The first is the Fox News approach, mining for partisan outrage by offering up examples of right-wing supporters somehow being insulted or victimized by mean liberals, who are inevitably shown to be hypocritical about science. The second is the sports talk approach (Cain came to Fox from ESPN), using bluster and anger to cover up for a lack of substance. Indeed, it’s almost impressive how much time Cain has spent on vaccines without saying anything of substance.
Interestingly, nearly all of Cain’s podcasts are sponsored by Facebook; at one point, he complains that Instagram will censor his podcast because of his vaccine comments moments before a Facebook ad plays. Most if not all of the ads mention Facebook’s willingness to update the 1996 Telecommunications Act and other regulations. Some of the ads include mention of Facebook’s efforts to fight misinformation. (As my colleagues have noted for months, Facebook is rife with anti-vaccine content despite promises that executives have made.)
Cain works hard, when talking about vaccines, to distance himself from the label of “anti-vax,” and that much is true, to a certain extent. But what Cain does is the moral equivalent: While anti-vaccine advocates lie to discourage Americans from taking life-saving medicine, Cain instead bellows at people who are encouraging the vaccines, treating vaccine advocates as cartoonish partisans; if someone doesn’t fit in that box to Cain, they are not mentioned at all.
We can all agree that sometimes people trying to help do only make things worse, but even if Cain is correct in some cases about overreach of vaccine advocates (and that’s debatable), it’s hard to see what he actually brings to the table himself. A condescension-filled podcast complaining about condescension doesn’t actually make anything any better -- he’s just trying to weaponize the existing vaccine hesitancy for his own personal gain, all while admitting that he’s been vaccinated. A perfect fit for Fox News, really.
Here’s a look at Cain’s approach to vaccines on his podcast (launched in April) and how it has gotten progressively worse as time has gone on: