Weinstein next shifted to pressing Stelter on the reality that, when it comes to cable news shows (particularly in primetime), “the goal is to keep everyone in a perpetual stage of outrage” and, to piggyback on his point, stoke fear in their audiences to keep them huddled in their ideological corners.
“Do you see that — that kind of, you’re stirring up the audience in certain ways, whether it’s CNN or MSNBC or Fox in primetime, different audiences, but does it seem that...there’s these focus points they find within the each of those audiences to kind of to keep them — keep them watching,” Weinstein continued.
Of course, Stelter denied this for CNN, MSNBC, and a select few at Fox but not Fox News pundits, who intentionally deceive their audiences by ignoring “Trump’s failures and Trump’s troubles.”
Another interesting part of the entire podcast was Weinstein correctly observing that, when, for example, something Mueller-related breaks on CNN, they devote “four hours of coverage on one small aspect of which we really don’t know” with “different panels composed with people.”
Weinstein pressed Stelter if such a news operation is “really...enlightening people” or “making news entertainment” to the detriment of other topics, but the CNN host ducked and dodged the question for long stretches. Eventually, he arrived at the issue and, naturally, defended establishment media for “cover[ing] what’s newest.”
Stelter then launched into another defense with this one being why CNN obsesses over one story at the time:
To me, the internet and mobile phones have fundamentally changed what we can do and what CNN can be and here’s why. CNN is no longer a TV channel. It’s a website and mobile app that also has a TV channel. And yes, most of the profits still come from TV. But you have to think of it as a giant operation that has a TV channel and that TV channel is one version of our product and then the website is another version of our product and, to me, I try to distinguish this way because, on TV, thus we can really focus on what we can do best on TV, which is not to tell your 30 headlines in 30 minutes anymore because the phone has replaced that. If you do that, it makes no sense because the phone is better at that, right? It’s a — the phone is a better delivery mechanism than what cable news used to be, which was a bunch of headlines. So I guess I look at CNN now, where I look at MSNBC now and I think the reason why it’s more of a rolling news and talk show focusing on one big story at a time is because of the internet’s revolution....And by the way, you layer on top of this whole, one-story-at-a-time because that’s what TV can do best, what digital can’t and the layer on top of that — a crisis at the White House and then of course we’re going to focus on one big story at a time. I mean, you know, this is — this is — this is it. This is the game.
He also demanded that the insistence from his “Twitter trolls” that “‘CNN is 24/7 Trump’ is not true” even though “Trump is the biggest story in the world,” so people should turn off the TV and open up CNN.com or the app to read other things.
Meanwhile, the MRC took a look at one entire day of CNN coverage early on in the Trump administration (May 12, 2017) and found that 92 percent of their airtime focused on Trump.