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Chris Hayes exposes the start of a Trumpian fascist local media takeover (VIDEO)

Chris Hayes exposes the start of a Trumpiam fascist local media takeover

Chris Hayes presented a significant segment that likely will not get the notoriety it deserves. This type of fascist attack is generally acted upon when it is too late. Will this be the case here as well?

The march to a Fascist state

Trump’s FCC will likely relax rules that will allow Sinclair to reach over 70% of the U.S. population with Trump TV style propaganda. This increases America’s Fascist quotient and it is something American better add to the repertoire of issues we must fight.

The following exchange is probative.

Chris Hayes: A proposed $3.9 billion deal to buy Tribune Media would give Sinclair another 42 stations and the ability to reach 72% of U.S. households. Now, that level of dominance of the air waves by a single company is supposed to be outside the bounds of the law. But this spring, President Trump’s very pro-business FCC Chairman Ajit Pai, invoked a controversial loophole in the law that would allow the deal to go through. And now, despite heated opposition, that deal is widely expected to be approved. Joining me now, MSNBC media analyst Gabe Sherman, social correspondent for Vanity Fair. So I want to start with just how do people know whether they are watching a Sinclair station? Which is that — I mean, how do they know?

Gabriel Sherman: The truth is, they don’t. I mean, Sinclair owns affiliates all over the country that are affiliated with the big networks, and so if you are watching your local ABC, NBC, or Fox affiliate in a market, you may have no idea that the corporate owner of this network has a political point of view.
Sinclair does not brand its networks, “We are” — like Fox News would say, “we are a conservative network, we’re Fox News,” the viewers would know that. Sinclair does not market itself as the owner of these networks.

Chris Hayes: Yeah, and there’s also the difference between local affiliates — I mean, when I grew up in New York, I would think of the network as the association, right? But outside of the major markets, you could be watching ABC in one market that Sinclair owned, and NBC in another, or CBS in another, and they’re just owned by Sinclair. Those numbers — those letters don’t really mean anything in terms of the news programming.

Gabriel Sherman: Of course, and that’s — that is really why this is such a sea change, possibly, in the American media landscape where you have an ideologically predisposed company that could push its message behind the curtain of objective news.
I mean, this also — we should just put it in the context of a generational quest by Republicans to change the media landscape in their favor, going back to 1987 when Ronald Reagan FCC — Ronald Reagan’s FCC repealed the Fairness Doctrine, which allows one point of view, which gave rise to talk radio. We are now seeing the rise, potentially, of right-wing broadcasting in television.

Chris Hayes: Sort of a talk radio-ization of local news.

Gabriel Sherman: Exactly.

Chris Hayes: And how controversial is the approval of the deal itself?

Gabriel Sherman: Well, you talk to people in the media industry, whether or not they are ideologically aligned with Sinclair, and they say this is very controversial. In fact, Rupert Murdoch has now made overtures for Fox to acquire more local stations because they don’t want a corporate competitor like Sinclair to be competing with them. You know, there used to be laws in place that prevented the corporate overlords to buy up all the local markets, because you did not want to have a homogeneous point of view, and now that these regulations are being repealed, there is nothing to say that NBC or Comcast could go and buy up local stations.

Call your Congresspeople and Senators and tell them you want them to stop the purchase. Trump’s undemocratic acts must be stopped at every turn.

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