Monday night, Fox News host Tucker Carlson accused The New York Times of planning to publish the location of his home in a story “about where we live” and, in the process, also incited his followers to reveal the addresses of the reporter and photographer. The paper promptly denied Carlson’s allegation, even asserting that he knew it was false. But right-wing media figures and outlets are repeating Carlson’s assertion and attacking the Times, and Carlson’s fans have already started doxxing the reporter and photographer he mentioned by name.
During the final segment of his show Monday night, Carlson began by referring to an incident from 2018, in which a crowd of protesters gathered outside his then-home in Washington, D.C. Carlson had claimed that his family had been threatened and his front door had been cracked from someone pounding on it. (Though at the time, other reports disputed the extent of his claims.)
Carlson then accused the Times of preparing a story “about where we live,” set to run next week. “Editors there know exactly what will happen to my family when it does run. I called them today, and I told them. But they didn't care. They hate my politics. They want this show off the air.”
Then Carlson rhetorically asked how the Times staffers would feel if they were doxxed: