One America News Network has cultivated a singular obsession with 2000 Mules, a recent movie by right-wing fraudster Dinesh D’Souza pushing an outlandish conspiracy theory about the 2020 election. Unlike other right-wing TV networks, OAN has devoted a ton of coverage to D’Souza’s movie and is apparently attempting to get the rights to air it in full.
According to a Media Matters review, from March 1 to May 31, OAN mentioned or discussed 2000 Mules in 204 segments (including repeat airings), for a total of 8 hours and 45 minutes of programming. The network's nonstop hype for the movie has included at least six interviews with D'Souza, fawning coverage of its Mar-a-Lago red carpet premiere, and OAN personalities telling viewers that 2000 Mules is both “irrefutable” and “the crime of the century and the film of the century, all in one.”
According to D’Souza, 2000 Mules uncovered an army of unidentifiable operatives secretly packing ballot boxes in swing states during the 2020 election. He alleges to have proved this activity through geolocation evidence that shows, as The Washington Post put it, “some people may have been near drop-box locations on a given day.” Many of the other central claims of the movie have similarly been demolished.
Despite its utter nonsense and speculation, 2000 Mules is already influencing real-world political events. On Tuesday, OAN aired nearly 2 hours of live coverage of True The Vote, the right-wing nonprofit that provided the data used in D’Souza’s film, presenting “evidence” of statewide fraud from the movie to the Arizona legislature. OAN’s Chanel Rion covered the hearing on Twitter, saying lawmakers appeared to have “a change of heart” after buying into the movie's flimsy arguments.
Along with serving as fodder in efforts to influence actual election outcomes, 2000 Mules also enables D’Souza and Salem Media Group to grift money and attention off of an audience seeking infinite confirmation for false beliefs. And OAN, still reeling from the loss of DirecTV, is seeking some of that attention by desperately doubling down on perhaps its favorite topic: dead-end lies and conspiracy theories about the 2020 election.