Factor This: OReillys PounceBill OReilly MPA 1996
Regular viewers
know what theyre getting when they tune into Bill OReilly
MPA 1996 any weeknight between 8 p.m. and 9 p.m. This Fox News resident
dishes it out as good as he gets on his self-named talk show, The
OReilly Factor. One night last spring, for instance, he
criticized Don Hewitt, creator of 60 Minutes, for the way
the networks present the news, and insisted that the networks dont
take any chances. That same night, he questioned U.S. Comptroller General
David Walker: How much did Hillary Clintons North Africa trip cost?
Where is the $5 billion the Department of Agriculture cant find?
What specifically happened to $1 billion the Clinton administration sent
to Haiti? Before The
OReilly Factor came on the air, he questioned why there couldnt
be a news analysis show with more of an edge similar to the Sunday
morning lineup. It turns out that he had his finger on the pulse of what
American viewers wanted because his ratings are up 190 percent from 2000
to 2001, and his is the highest-rated show on cable, even edging out CNNs
Larry King Live. I realized
that the news business was changing rapidly and traditional news shows
were losing their audiences for two reasons: people were working so much
that they missed the nightly news, and the three network news programs
were very similar and conservative in their presentations, OReilly
said, explaining why he hammers away at his guests, insisting OReilly
has what the Washington Post calls the Pounce, his
signature move, as powerful as an uppercut and about as subtle.
The Wall Street Journal calls OReillys style one
part headmaster, one part bull terrier with his teeth sunk into the postmans
trousers. Highly praised by some, severely criticized by others,
OReilly cares little about his legacy or how he will be remembered
when hes gone. It doesnt concern me what people think,
says OReilly. Most TV performers are inhibited because they
want approval from the people who see them. I dont care. As he thinks
about his audience, OReilly conjures up memories of his father who
was very cautious, who didnt take any chances
because he thought the system would reward him for that loyalty. The
system didnt reward him, says OReilly, who doesnt
play the game, and doesnt take the predictable road.
Instead, he seeks what he sees to be the truth and relates that to his
audience. And he seems to have had the same audience in mind when he wrote
The OReilly
Factor: The Good, Bad, and Completely Ridiculous in American Life.
In this, his second book, he reveals that the federal government has spent
$230,000 for a study of housefly sex habits, $27,000 for an analysis of
why prisoners want to escape, and $100,000 to determine why Americans
dont like beets. OReilly,
who started at Fox News as an anchor/host in 1996, had been working in
television for 23 years before landing at the Kennedy School, where he
discovered that there was a more diverse way to look at things. What he
liked most about the Kennedy School was the atmosphere of lets
take a different road to fix a traditional problem. According
to OReilly, one weak point is that the Kennedy School cant
get the word out. TV studios and satellite hookups, he believes, would
help the public learn more about the Persistence and discipline are OReillys mantra. He has become, in his own words, one of the most powerful broadcasters in the country. I was very persistent, says OReilly, looking over his long career. Very honest. I didnt compromise. I didnt change my style. And Im proud I hung in there for 27 years. Aine Cryts |
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