It was clear why Chris Wallace left Fox News late last year. Now he speaks.
In this instance, Wallace’s comments about his years with Fox News surface as he and CNN are promoting CNN Plus, a $6-per-month streaming service that’ll feature his show, “Who’s Talking to Chris Wallace?” The new gig comes with a pivot, as Wallace claims he wants to transition from all-politics to a more general-interest beat that includes business, sports and culture. At this point, however, what Wallace says about Fox News remains more newsworthy than whatever he’ll be doing on the streaming front, as the news coverage of his “unsustainable” interview makes clear. In his interview with the Times, Wallace confirmed that he’d expressed concerns to management about Carlson’s “Patriot Purge,” a conspiratorial Fox Nation series on the Jan. 6 riots that sought to portray those who attacked the Capitol as maligned lovers of country. “And since November of 2020, that just became unsustainable, increasingly unsustainable as time went on.”Still, he acknowledged that some viewers may wonder why he did not leave earlier.“Some people might have drawn the line earlier, or at a different point,” he said, adding: “I think Fox has changed over the course of the last year and a half. “Before, I found it was an environment in which I could do my job and feel good about my involvement at Fox,” Mr. Wallace said of his time at the network. It’s a good sign that Wallace sounds a touch weary of having to answer for Fox News. Perhaps some of the outrage over the network’s coverage of the 2020 election had an impact.
Wallace said that "when people start to question the truth" he found that his work there was "unsustainable.” Fox News anchor Chris Wallace moderates the ...
“I’m fine with opinion: conservative opinion, liberal opinion,” Wallace told The Times. “But when people start to question the truth — Who won the 2020 election? Despite Fox News' conservative tilt, Wallace was often a moderate voice. Wallace's new show is not just a place to talk politics.
Journalist's new show begins on archrival CNN's streaming service after nearly 20 years with the right-leaning cable channel.
Was January 6 an insurrection?’ – I found that unsustainable,” he told the newspaper. But when people start to question the truth – ‘Who won the 2020 election? His departure dealt a blow to Fox’s news operation at a time when its opinion side had become pre-eminent.
As he starts a new streaming show at CNN, the longtime TV anchor reflects on his decision to leave Fox News after 18 years.
Mr. Wallace said he hoped “to have the kind of intimate, thoughtful conversation where we forget we’re on camera in a studio.” Interviewing Ms. Collins, he chimes in with a few lyrics from her 1975 hit, “Send In the Clowns.” In early episodes, he discusses space travel with the “Star Trek” actor William Shatner, asks the former Disney boss Bob Iger about meeting the pope, and at one point sings a warbling duet with the songstress Judy Collins. A new president, Chris Licht, is taking over CNN after the network’s longtime leader, Jeff Zucker, resigned in February over an undisclosed relationship with a colleague. “And since November of 2020, that just became unsustainable, increasingly unsustainable as time went on.” “I’m fine with opinion: conservative opinion, liberal opinion,” Mr. Wallace said in his first extensive interview about his decision to leave. The stakes are high for CNN, which is undergoing wrenching change. But I can certainly understand where somebody would say, ‘Gee, you were a slow learner, Chris.’” “But when people start to question the truth — Who won the 2020 election? “One of the reasons that I left Fox was because I wanted to put all of that behind me,” Mr. Wallace said, adding that since his exit, “there has not been a moment when I have second-guessed myself about that decision.” But in December, Mr. Wallace, 74, issued a final verdict: He was done. — I found that unsustainable.”
Wallace said he felt good about being at Fox News all the way until November 2020 — when Donald Trump lost the election.
He was 50.Here’s the obitfrom The New York Times’ Caryn Ganz and Joe Coscarelli. And, last June, Rolling Stone’s Brian Hiatt spoke with Hawkins for an extensive interview in: “‘We Don’t Know How to Phone It In’: A Final Visit With Taylor Hawkins.” - NBC News and MSNBC will air a special investigative series over the next two weeks starting today that will reveal how the U.S. government’s spending during the two years since COVID-19 has led to historic fraud. The Washington Post’s Dan Balz wrote, “The messages once again show how former president Donald Trump’s conspiracies, lies and obsessions infected the Republican Party (and in many quarters still do), from its rank-and-file base to some of its most establishment figures. Those who attacked the Capitol are not representative of our great teams of patriots for DJT!!” In one text, Thomas wrote, “Help This Great President stand firm, Mark!!!…You are the leader, with him, who is standing for America’s constitutional governance at the precipice. In a blockbuster report from The Washington Post’s Bob Woodward and CBS News’ Robert Costa, Ginni Thomas sent at least 29 text messages to White House chief of staff Mark Meadows in the days and weeks after the election, pressing Meadows to keep pursuing avenues to overturn the election. In his memoir, Justice Thomas wrote that they were ‘one being — an amalgam’ and called her his ‘best friend.’ She often uses similar language to describe her husband.” Andrew Morse, executive vice president and chief digital officer at CNN, told Bauder, “We believe fundamentally the future is incredibly bright if we can build a global subscription product that values incredibly important journalism. CNN+ also has the advantage of sticking with stories instead of going to commercials, allowing for more in-depth coverage. With TV viewers already paying for a slew of streaming services (Netflix, Amazon, Disney, Hulu, etc.), will they be willing to add another channel just for news and news-like entertainment and information? At its heart, CNN+ will be an extension of CNN and that means, first and foremost, a news service. But when people start to question the truth — Who won the 2020 election?
Wallace says his new CNN+ series was inspired by the work of interviewers like CNN icon Larry King and Charlie Rose, and that he hoped “to have the kind of ...
Wallace also said it wasn’t until after former President Trump’s 2020 defeat that he felt a shift at the network. — I found that unsustainable.” Wallace added that he doesn’t necessarily have an issue with “conversative opinion or liberal opinion.” However, “when people start to question the truth — Who won the 2020 election?
Wallace was no longer "comfortable" at Fox when the network began to question election results, Capitol riot.
"I don't want to feel like I am betraying a trust that I had by being a Fox News contributor. "Whether it's 'Patriot Purge' or anti-vax stuff, I don't want it in my name, and I want to call it out and criticize it," he added. Some former Fox News employees share Wallace's view of the network after the 2020 election. After the election, Fox News expanded its opinion programming at the expense of its news division and fired politics editor Chris Stirewalt, who was the first to call Arizona for Joe Biden on election night. "I don't know how some people sleep at night," he said. "But when people start to question the truth — Who won the 2020 election?