The Corner

Charles Sykes on Trump and the Media

Conservative commentator Charles Sykes writes:

Mr. Trump understands that attacking the media is the reddest of meat for his base, which has been conditioned to reject reporting from news sites outside of the conservative media ecosystem.

For years, as a conservative radio talk show host, I played a role in that conditioning by hammering the mainstream media for its bias and double standards. But the price turned out to be far higher than I imagined. The cumulative effect of the attacks was to delegitimize those outlets and essentially destroy much of the right’s immunity to false information. We thought we were creating a savvier, more skeptical audience. Instead, we opened the door for President Trump, who found an audience that could be easily misled.

The news media’s spectacular failure to get the election right has made it only easier for many conservatives to ignore anything that happens outside the right’s bubble and for the Trump White House to fabricate facts with little fear of alienating its base.

Unfortunately, that also means that the more the fact-based media tries to debunk the president’s falsehoods, the further it will entrench the battle lines.

I agree with Sykes that many conservatives are so reflexively distrustful of the media that they discount even accurate reports that are unflattering to President Trump. But I think he is leaving out a major contributor to that phenomenon: the fact that much of the media actually exhibited the “bias and double standards” that Sykes and other conservatives have hammered, and still is exhibiting it.

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