THE DAILY NEWSLETTER  - THURSDAY, APRIL 2, 2020

Media Winners & Losers

MEDIA WINNER:
John Roberts

Fox News Channel chief correspondent John Roberts had an extensive back and forth with both President Donald Trump and Vice President Mike Pence in Wednesday evening's Coronavirus Task Force briefing.

Roberts pressed hard for answers on the question of how the administration is planning to cope with people who contract the virus or contracted it before there was mitigation, and who do not have insurance. 

He pressed so hard, in fact, that Pence had to tag in the President. Which elicited praise from Trump for Pence having dodged it so expertly and at such length

In another instance, Roberts was asking about the tensions and conflict between the Trump administration and the Obama administration, prompting a candid response from Trump. 

"What, are you working for CNN?” said Trump. "Thought you were with Fox."

The briefing room is observing social distancing rules, meaning not only that it's emptier, but access is being provided on a rotation. That's why OAN was booted by the WHCA. 

Roberts, who is with Fox, is doing his job and he's doing it professionally and well.

Both for his network and for the press at large. Despite any expectations from the White House or the networks's critics. 
MEDIA LOSER:
Brit Hume

Fox News Channel senior political analyst Brit Hume had the honor in this space just ten days ago when he shared a blog post railing against media “hysteria” over the coronavirus; a post riddled with errors and inane jargon.

Hume raised eyebrows again today when he once more shared an analysis from essentially a random Twitter user, which in this case replaced "hysteria" with accusing hospitals in New York of "inflating' the number of deaths from the Covid-19 coronavirus.

"Very informative thread,” Hume's retweet exclaimed. 

The thread he was thrilled about said that NY's numbers are "cooked" and, in a now-deleted tweet, the "extreme salesman" author had "zero doubt this was manufactured in China."

Despite Hume's assertion that the thread "explains" why fatality numbers "are inflated", the chart it used merely recorded the number of victims who also had other medical conditions along with Covid-19. The assertion that this proves somehow the deaths were definitely not caused by the coronavirus was simply hypothesis by the random tweeter in whom Hume invested his total faith.

Just another example of off-the-cuff conjecture from a layperson being offered as definitive refutation by Hume. All part of the narrative he won't say out loud but is now prevalent on the Trump right: That this is all a made-up problem designed to get Trump.

The A-Block

The Coronavirus briefing

President Donald Trump, Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin, and SBA Administrator Jovita Carranza spoke to the press at length on Thursday afternoon on the subject of the economy, the stimulus, and the checks being sent to individual taxpayers.

[Watch the briefing here]

After CNN, citing a memo from House Democrats, reported that some Americans could be waiting months for their checks from the CARE Act, Mnuchin was asked about timeframes during the briefing.

"That is not going to take five weeks," he said. "I am assuring the American public, they need the money now. What we're going to do is, again, if we have your information, you'll get it within two weeks."

Asked about people who don't have their info on file can still add their direct deposit information and get the money quickly. "This money does people no good if it shows up in four months, and we will deliver on that promise."

The president also took time in the briefing to say "witch hunt" a bunch. So there's that.

1 Million

The number of coronavirus cases worldwide has now topped the 1 million mark. According to Johns Hopkins University, the threshold was crossed earlier on Thursday. The United States has more than double the cases of any other nation — with more than 236,000 as of this writing. Italy has the next most with more than 115,000. Spain is next, with more than 110,000.

74 professors 

Seventy-four communications and journalism professors signed an open letter to the heads of Fox News accusing the network of spreading misinformation on the coronavirus amid the global pandemic. The letter was addressed to both Rupert and Lachlan Murdoch

You don't say!

China lied about a number of aspects of the coronavirus pandemic, and hid the true number of cases they faced, which led many observers to exclaim, in varying degrees of their own words, "well, duh."

The primary shall go on ... and on

The Democratic National Committee has announced that they will postpone their 2020 presidential convention in Milwaukee, WI, until mid-August in light of the ongoing coronavirus pandemic.

Don't breathe too much 

In a letter to the White House, Dr. Harvey Fineberg, who chairs the National Academy of Sciences’ Standing Committee on Emerging Infectious Diseases and 21st Century Health Threats, wrote that, regarding “the possibility that [coronavirus] could be spread by conversation, in addition to sneeze/cough-induced droplets,” the current research “supports the possibility that [coronavirus] could be spread via bioaerosols generated directly by patients’ exhalation.”

HEY! That's... actually, that's a good question

"Do you think perhaps, even though you don’t know for sure, politics is playing a role in this? The fact that the president thought he could be optimistic on it, did that actually bring politics into this and is this cure not moving forward because people don’t like the president?”

That's a question that Fox & Friends co-host Brian Kilmeade asked Dr. Mehmet Oz on Thursday morning, on the topic of hydroxychloroquine. 

Talking up the drug's potential as a cure has had ill consequences for some on Twitter, despite reportedly promising results and even first-hand accounts. Kilmeade's question should be asked by other outlets, too. It's rather important to know that information about Covid-19 is being treated with objectivity.

FOX News and Facebook virtual town hall

Moderated by FNC’s Martha MacCallum, Fox is airing a virtual town hall tonight, which will feature a joint donation of $1 million to Feeding America’s COVID-19 Response Fund. The event will be available on the Fox Facebook page.

The tech is in keeping with the national mitigation measures of social distancing and, in many locales, stay at home orders, as they explain in the press release:
 

Facebook shipped each audience member a Portal device to allow guests to virtually attend and participate by asking the experts, including White House coronavirus task force members Dr. Deborah Birx and Surgeon General Dr. Jerome Adams,  questions about the pandemic.

That's pretty cool, actually.

Introducing Mediaite+

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Today, we’re proud to launch Mediaite+ — a brand new subscription service designed to give you even more of the industry content you’ve come to expect from us over the years. Many have been asking for a Mediate experience without ads (including on videos!), and now, we’re able to deliver. No more side banners. No more auto-play or required video commercials. READ MORE HERE.


 

Must-See Clip of the Day

"I totally get why we’re losing so many people"

CNN anchor Chris Cuomo has continued to host his show while quarantined with Covid-19. He described for the audience the hellish coronavirus symptoms he is experiencing, which included hallucinating conversations with his late father, feeling like he was being beaten in the chest “like a piñata,” and shivering so hard he chipped a tooth.

It's a look directly inside what it is like to have the illness as a younger and healthier person, something a lot of people have questions about.

It is well worth watching.

Links We Like

The longer lockdown continues, the more imperiled we become
via Spectator
Epidemiologists weigh in on seeing “closed circle” of friends during the pandemic
via Vox
In the age of coronavirus, even movie theaters learn to love streaming
- via Variety
Wearing masks must be a national policy
- via New York Times
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