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BOMBSHELL! The Woke Agenda Has Killed The Right Wing Media.
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Mush Marshman
2024-05-30 03:04:55 UTC
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The woke agenda has killed the right wing media.

The Ultra-Woke Right-Wing Media Are in Trouble



The flow of traffic to Donald Trump’s most loyal digital-media boosters
isn’t just slowing; it’s utterly collapsing.
By Paul Farhi

April 13, 2024

As you may have heard, mainstream news organizations are facing a financial
crisis. Many liberal publications have taken an even more severe beating.
But the most dramatic declines over the past few years belong to
conservative and right-wing sites. The flow of traffic to Donald Trump’s
most loyal digital-media boosters isn’t just slowing, as in the rest of the
industry; it’s utterly collapsing.

This past February, readership of the 10 largest conservative websites was
down 40 percent compared with the same month in 2020, according to The
Righting, a newsletter that uses monthly data from Comscore—essentially the
Nielsen ratings of the internet—to track right-wing media. (February is the
most recent month with available Comscore data.) Some of the bigger names
in the field have been pummeled the hardest: The Daily Caller lost 57
percent of its audience; Drudge Report, the granddaddy of conservative
aggregation, was down 81 percent; and The Federalist, founded just over a
decade ago, lost a staggering 91 percent. (The site’s CEO and co-founder,
Sean Davis, called that figure “laughably inaccurate” in an email but
offered no further explanation.) FoxNews.com, by far the most popular
conservative-news site, has fared better, losing “only” 22 percent of
traffic, which translates to 23 million fewer monthly site visitors
compared with four years ago.

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Some amount of the decline over that period was probably inevitable, given
that 2020 was one of the most intense and newsiest years in decades,
propping up publications across the political spectrum. But that doesn’t
explain why the falloff has been especially steep on the right side of the
media aisle.

What’s going on? The obvious culprit is Facebook. For years, Facebook’s
mysterious algorithms served up links to news and commentary articles,
sending droves of traffic to their publishers. But those days are gone.
Amid criticism from elected officials and academics who said the social-
media giant was spreading hate speech and harmful misinformation, including
Russian propaganda, before the 2016 election, Facebook apparently came to
question the value of featuring news on its platform. In early 2018, it
began deemphasizing news content, giving greater priority to content posted
by friends and family members. In 2021, it tightened the tap a little
further. This past February, it announced that it would do the same on
Instagram and Threads. All of this monkeying with the internet’s plumbing
drastically reduced the referral traffic flowing to news and commentary
sites. The changes have affected everyone involved in digital media,
including some liberal-leaning sites—such as Slate (which saw a 42 percent
traffic drop), the Daily Beast (41 percent), and Vox (62 percent, after
losing its two most prominent writers)—but the impact appears to have been
the worst, on average, for conservative media. (Referral traffic from
Google has also declined over the past few years, but far less sharply.)



Unsurprisingly, the people who run conservative outlets see this as
straightforward proof that Big Tech is trying to silence them. Neil Patel,
a co-founder (with Tucker Carlson) of the Daily Caller, told me that the
tech giants want “to crush any independent media that was perceived to have
been helpful to Trump’s rise.” Patel calls this a form of “Big Tech–driven
viewpoint discrimination” that “should scare any fair-minded individual.”

A simpler explanation is that conservative digital media are
disproportionately dependent on social-media referrals in the first place.
Many mainstream publications have long-established brand names, large
newsrooms to churn out copy, and, in a few cases, large numbers of loyal
subscribers. Sites like Breitbart and Ben Shapiro’s The Daily Wire,
however, were essentially Facebook-virality machines, adept at injecting
irresistibly outrageous, clickable nuggets into people’s feeds. So the
drying-up of referrals hit these publications much harder.



And so far, unlike some publications that have pivoted away from relying on
traffic and programmatic advertising, they’ve struggled to adapt. Rather
than stabilizing amid Facebook’s new world order, traffic on the right has
mostly continued south. Among the big losers over the past year are The
Washington Free Beacon, whose traffic was down 58 percent, and Gateway
Pundit, down 62 percent. Compare that with prominent mainstream and liberal
sites, which, although still well below their 2020 heights, have at least
stanched the bleeding. Traffic to The Washington Post and The New York
Times from February 2023 to February 2024 was essentially flat. Slate’s was
up 14 percent.

For conservative media publishers, the financial consequences of such a
steep decline in readership are hard to know for certain. None of the best-
known names publicly reports revenue figures, and many are supported by
rich patrons who may not be in it for the money. But the situation can’t be
good. Digital media still rely on advertising, and advertising still goes
to places with more, not fewer, people paying attention. Traffic also
drives subscriptions.

More broadly, the loss of readership can’t be helpful to the ideological
cause. Top-drawing sites like the conspiratorial Gateway Pundit and
Infowars help keep the MAGA faithful faithful by recirculating, amplifying,
and sometimes creating the culture-war memes and talking points that
dominate right and far-right opinion. Less traffic means less influence.

Paul Farhi: Is American journalism headed toward an ‘extinction-level
event’?

The Daily Caller’s Patel insisted that faltering traffic alone isn’t a
death sentence for the onetime lords of the conservative web. With the
addition of a subscription service and tighter financial management, the
Daily Caller’s financial health is solid and improving, he said. Outlets
like his own can still succeed with people who “have lost trust in the
corporate media and are actively seeking alternatives.”

The trouble is that there are now alternatives to the alternatives. The
Righting’s proprietor, Howard Polskin, pointed out to me that the websites
that dominated the field in 2016—Fox News, Breitbart, The Washington Times,
and so on—are no longer the only players in MAGA world. The marketplace has
expanded and fragmented since then, splintering the audience seeking
conservative or even extremist perspectives among podcasts, YouTube videos,
Substack newsletters, and boutique platforms like Rumble. “There’s a lot of
choice,” Polskin said. “Even if [the big] sites went out of business
tomorrow, there are a lot of voices still out there.”

The DIY ethic is embodied by the likes of Megyn Kelly, Bill O’Reilly, Steve
Bannon, and Carlson, who became conservative celebrities while working for
established media organizations but have maintained their profiles after
leaving them in disgrace. Since being fired by Fox News last year, Carlson
has moved his contentious commentaries and interviews (including one with
Vladimir Putin) to X. Kelly has come back from a messy divorce with NBC in
2019 (which followed an unhappy exit from Fox News in 2017) to host a
massively popular podcast. O’Reilly, likewise forced out of Fox in 2017,
has kept talking via newsletters, video streams, and weekly appearances on
the NewsNation cable channel. And Bannon, the former Trump consigliere who
left Breitbart, which he founded, after publicly criticizing the Trump
family, has gone the podcaster route himself; his War Room podcast was
ranked as the leading source of false and misleading information in a broad
study of the medium by the Brookings Institution last year.

The precipitous decline in traffic to conservative publications raises a
larger and possibly unanswerable question: Did these operations ever really
hold the political and cultural clout that critics ascribed to them at
their peak? Recall the liberal anger in 2020 when Ben Shapiro was routinely
dominating Facebook’s most-engaged content list, generating accusations
that Facebook’s algorithm was favoring right-wing posts and pushing voters
toward Trump. Yet Joe Biden went on to win the election easily, and
Democrats overperformed in the 2022 midterms. Now, as conservatives cry
that Big Tech has crushed their traffic, Trump is running neck and neck
with Biden in the polls, even with a legal cloud hanging over him and
shortfalls of campaign cash. Maybe who wins the traffic contest doesn’t
matter as much as it once appeared.


https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2024/04/conservative-digital-
media-traffic/678055/
Lawrence D'Oliveiro
2024-06-01 23:11:34 UTC
Permalink
Post by Mush Marshman
Unsurprisingly, the people who run conservative outlets see this as
straightforward proof that Big Tech is trying to silence them. Neil
Patel, a co-founder (with Tucker Carlson) of the Daily Caller, told
me that the tech giants want “to crush any independent media that
was perceived to have been helpful to Trump’s rise.”
I wonder how they got to be “tech giants”, if not by doing the same sorts
of things they were doing when they were small ...

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