Law Professor Explains How Menendez Broke the 'Goldilocks Rule' of Corruption
Menendez Isn't Going Anywhere, And He's Making That Official Today
That Annoying Gavin Newsom Is Measuring The Drapes
UAW Expands Labor Strike, Though One Automaker Isn't Being Targeted as Heavily
The Evil Party Gets Stupider
Biden’s Hostage Deal: An Affront To Our Efforts To Hold Iran Accountable
Will Americans Elect A Convicted Felon?
Would Chris Christie Run Against Menendez?
Tulsi Gabbard Torches Dems for Turning US Into a Banana Republic
Cowards and Communists
Latest Poll Is the Last Straw for Bumbling Biden
What if We Excused Other Crimes the Way We Do Election Fraud?
The Women of Iran Pave the Way to Freedom
North Carolina Governor Fails to Tell the Truth About Election Reform
Fauci Had 'I Am the Science,' Garland Now Dangerously Has 'I am the...
OPINION

The Genius of Roger Ailes

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement

Roger Ailes was no genius, not in the league of Stephen Hawking and Albert Einstein. The founding chairman of Fox News Channel, who died last week from complications after suffering a fall, understood and respected Middle America from whence he came.

Advertisement

When the opportunity arrived to address the legitimate concerns of "flyover territory" about biased news coverage that frequently disparaged and stereotyped Middle America's values and beliefs, he seized it. While the cultural, political and especially media elites mocked the churchgoing, patriotic "family values" of conservatives, Ailes and Rupert Murdoch saw an opening, and they began appealing to a demographic the secular-progressives hated or ignored.

Together, Ailes and Murdoch built a media behemoth that continues to lead all of cable TV in ratings and profits.

I was a contributor for Fox News for 19 years. For two of those years I had my own show ("After Hours"), and for 10 of those years I was part of a media critique program called "Fox News Watch." Before that, when Ailes was president of CNBC, he picked me to host a show two nights a week as part of his "CNBC All-Stars" rotation.

Ailes was loyal to those who were loyal to him. If someone experienced a serious illness, he would keep them on the payroll so they didn't have to worry about money. When Geraldine Ferraro, the 1984 Democratic vice presidential nominee and a Fox News contributor, was diagnosed with a rare form of blood cancer, Ailes continued paying her until she died. He did the same with other women and men who struggled with physical challenges, including cancer, drug dependency and alcoholism.

Advertisement

Reaction from the left to Ailes' passing was predictable. The New York Daily News claimed he leaves a "poisonous legacy." Slate wrote that his life's work was "making angry, paranoid creeps look like virtuous men." He would have laughed at that one. The Washington Post said, "His scourge will live for decades."

The left hated him because they believed he was guilty of trespassing on their territory. He demonstrated that the territory was up for grabs, and he seized it from them, or at least a significant part of it. Instead of learning a lesson from Ailes about the people they had ignored and disparaged for years, liberal journalists and management at the major networks and some newspapers doubled down and attacked Fox and Ailes as illegitimate practitioners of "real journalism."

Ailes loved the battle, and his success proves he was on the right side.

Ailes' work ethic was reflective of another era, an era that existed before the disastrous unholy trinity of envy, greed and entitlement.

In a 2012 column, I wrote about an award the Horatio Alger Society gave him. The society honors people who emerged from humble beginnings and overcame obstacles to become successful. I quoted from Ailes' acceptance speech: "People who believe they're victims will become victims. People who believe they can win, eventually will win."

Advertisement

Roger Ailes was far from a perfect man, as former President George H.W. Bush noted in a tweet, but he was a winner on one of the world's biggest stages, and that is his legacy.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos