One America News correspondent and conspiracy theorist Chanel Rion appeared on a QAnon program last month and lent credence to the QAnon conspiracy theory, stating that its central figure “is Q anonymous for a reason, for a very good reason, and I think that people need to respect that.” One of Rion’s colleagues, OAN correspondent Jenn Pellegrino, also said last month that “a lot of people that I know, including people in our office, have mentioned” QAnon “quite a bit."
Rion is the chief White House correspondent for One America News, an avowedly pro-Trump network that has been repeatedly praised by the president. In recent months, she has become infamous for serving as a source of softball questions during White House press briefings.
Rion has also used her OAN platform to forward pro-Trump conspiracy theories. In March, for instance, she pushed the absurd conspiracy theory that the coronavirus was created in a North Carolina laboratory. That claim originated from “Greg Rubini,” a conspiracy theorist and QAnon supporter (BuzzFeed News later reported that he is a fraud whose real name is Greg Palusa).
QAnon is a violence-linked conspiracy theory based on cryptic posts to online message boards from an anonymous user known as “Q" that have spread rampantly on social media and among fringe right-wing media. QAnon conspiracy theorists essentially believe that President Donald Trump is secretly working to take down the purported “deep state,” a supposed cabal of high-ranking officials who they claim are operating pedophile rings.
While at the North Lawn of the White House, Rion appeared on the June 9 broadcast of the Patriots’ Soapbox program The Common Sense Show. NBC News wrote in August 2018 that the Patriots’ Soapbox network is “a round-the-clock livestreamed YouTube channel for Qanon study and discussion. The channel is, in effect, a broadcast of a Discord chatroom with constant audio commentary from a rotating cast of volunteers and moderators.”
Toward the conclusion of the interview, co-host Derik Vance -- a QAnon supporter whose Twitter account features the QAnon slogan and a picture of him with Trump campaign manager Brad Parscale -- inquired if Rion could ask White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany “the Q question”: