SOTU reactions; competing realities; 'caravan' fears; late night laughs; what's next; Disney's earnings; ABC's Oscars plan

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Exec summary: Scroll down for "Fortnite" insight, the Washington Post's story about Jeff Bezos, and a new book about the birth of CNN...
 

Late of the Union


A month ago, in his prime time Oval Office address, President Trump urged "every citizen" to "CALL CONGRESS and tell them to finally, after all of these decades, secure our border." I never heard anything about a surge of calls. Did you? There's no evidence that anything Trump said that night had a lasting effect.

So that's why I'm skeptical that Tuesday night's State of the Union will be any different. But here are Tuesday night's and Wednesday morning's headlines...
 
 

Speech audience was most partisan since 2001


Tuesday night's address "drew a deeply Republican audience which largely gave the President strong reviews for his address from the House chamber, according to a CNN poll conducted by SSRS," Jennifer Agiesta writes.

Quoting from her story: "The audience had the largest partisan tilt measured in any CNN instant poll following a presidential address to Congress dating back to 2001. Viewers this year were roughly 17 points more likely than the general public to identify as Republicans and were largely fans of the President." We'll have some initial ratings info by midday Wednesday...

 

Competing realities


 -- Van Jones on CNN: "A psychotically incoherent speech, with cookies and dog poop."

 -- Laura Ingraham on Fox: "There was a lot for people on both sides of the aisle to really love here."

 -- "He spent more time on the wall than any other single issue tonight," George Stephanopoulos said on ABC. "Despite the fact that 60% of Americans do not actually want this wall," Cecilia Vega added...

 -- Lou Dobbs tweeted: "The President just delivered the nation a hallelujah moment!"

 -- "This was not a particularly good speech," Stephen Colbert said on a live "Late Show." But "what it lacked in quality, it made up in length. This speech was like watching paint lie..."

-- Sean Hannity agreed with Eric Trump, who said "It was his best speech he's ever given."

 -- CNN.com's headline right now: "Trump calls for unity in speech that jabs Dems."
 


Feeding "caravan" fears

If you haven't been watching Fox or reading right-wing websites, you probably haven't heard about the new "caravan." But Trump has heard a LOT about it from his Fox friends. And he brought it up in Tuesday's address.

Here's the context via my CNN Business story: Every morning for the past week, "Fox & Friends" hosts have been talking about a new "caravan" threat... and some of the migrants arrived at the border just in time for the SOTU. 

The result: Trump's frightening rhetoric about immigration rings true to Fox viewers, while it strikes many other Americans as extreme -- and even a joke...

 

Correcting Trump's false and misleading claims


Dozens of CNNers are contributing to this detailed and ongoing fact-check of Tuesday night's claims. Check it out here. On TV, Jim Sciutto provided a post-SOTU fact-check about Trump's immigration claims...

 -- More: The Post's team says the SOTU was "chockful of stretched facts and dubious figures..." (WaPo)

 

Trump never mentioned the shutdown...


...But Stacey Abrams brought it up in the Democratic response. Abrams seemed a lot more comfortable than most people tasked with a SOTU rebuttal. Her speech was well-received across all the major networks, from MSNBC to Fox...

 

Lowry's take


Brian Lowry emails: If SOTU is in part a battle of optics — complete with Oprah-worthy human-interest stories — it was remarkable how effective the white-clad Democratic congresswomen were as a silent but unavoidable rebuke when the camera panned the chamber. That was especially true when they turned Trump's boast about jobs into a reference to his role in the last election's Democratic wave that he seemed slow to grasp.

 >> Rachel Maddow immediately seized on the "peace and legislation"/"war and investigation" construction as the line that will likely linger, one that she likened to a bumper-sticker slogan...
 


The night's most GIF-able moment

When the House chamber broke out in a rendition of "Happy Birthday" for Tree of Life Synagogue shooting survivor Judah Samet, Trump smiled and played conductor...
 
 

Coverage notes


 -- A remarkable interactive by CNN's Sam Petulla: "How Trump's State of the Union address compares with 100 years of speeches..."

-- Trump ad-libbed here and there... mostly just adding a couple of words... but this addition was noteworthy. This part in all-caps was not in the prepared text: "I want people to come into our country, IN THE LARGEST NUMBERS EVER, but they have to come in legally."

 -- Fact-checker Daniel Dale's take: "You could feel which sections of the speech were authentically Trump and which ones were aides' attempts to get someone on TV to declare that today was the day Trump became president..."

 -- Erik Wemple tweeted about the lack of "fake news" barbs: "When was the last time President Trump spoke for nearly an hour without bashing the media?"

 -- Eric Bolling hosted post-SOTU coverage on BlazeTV from the lobby of the Trump International Hotel in DC... Katrina Pierson and Sean Spicer stopped by...
 
 

About the Dems...


AOC was interviewed live on NBC immediately after the speeches... Cory Booker was live on CBS afterward... Adam Schiff was on CNN... Amy Klobuchar was on MSNBC...

 --> And Klobuchar announced that she'll be announcing her 2020 plans in Minneapolis on Sunday...
 
 

The late-night comics get their turn


"All in all, this was one of Trump's tamer speeches, believe it or not," Trevor Noah said on a live edition of "The Daily Show" afterward.
He mock-applauded Trump's reading abilities: "I don't know if he's ready for a second term, but he's definitely ready for the second grade."

And he called out one of Trump's "we have not yet begun to dream" line at the end: "In other words, the nightmare is just beginning," Noah said...
 


What's next


CBS says Jeff Glor will have an "exclusive interview" with VP Mike Pence on Wednesday's "CBS This Morning..."
 

FOR THE RECORD, PART ONE

 -- "The more symbolically important Trump's border fight gets, the more desperately he needs to build a literal wall," Dara Lind writes... (Vox)

 -- Peter Baker and Michael Grynbaum have details from Trump's off-the-record lunch with TV anchors on Tuesday... (NYT)

 -- One of the sad headlines from the NYT story: "Almost 170 days after John McCain died, Donald Trump takes another pot shot at the late senator..." (People)

 -- Bill O'Reilly is writing a "history book" about Trump. He spent part of last weekend "in the West Wing and on Air Force One with exclusive access to the president..." (Media Matters)

 -- A front-page story in Tuesday's Post: "Myanmar's Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi could release 2 jailed journalists. She has not." (WaPo)
 
 

The big picture of Trump's troubles


This graphic is from Tuesday's "Situation Room" on CNN:
It lists six parts of Trumpworld that are under investigation by several different agencies. It's especially notable in light of Trump's SOTU line that "if there is going to be peace and legislation, there cannot be war and investigation."

Norah O'Donnell's reaction on Colbert: "He threatened Congress." That line about investigations "was a threat."

Many journalists pointed out that Richard Nixon similarly criticized Watergate investigations in his 1974 SOTU. But there are some big differences between then and now... CNN's Zachary B. Wolf has the details here...
 

SNEAK PEEK
 

Lisa Napoli's book about the birth of CNN


Coming soon: A new look at the creation of CNN and how it changed the world forever. Broadcaster and author Lisa Napoli is writing "Up All Night: CNN and the Birth of 24 Hour News..." Abrams Press is about to announce that it has acquired the book... And as someone who's known Napoli for 20 years, and now works at CNN, I can't wait to read it! Napoli started her career at CNN, BTW... Back when the channel was still derided as "Chicken Noodle News..." She's been working on the project for months, and wrote this Curbed piece about CNN's original home last summer... 
 
 

A groundbreaking hire for Axios


Axios has hired Jess Szmajda as CTO -- she will oversee tech staffers and "help lead the media company's expansion into paid products," VF's Joe Pompeo reported Tuesday. "She'll also blaze a trail for other transgender leaders in the industry."

From Pompeo's story: "Axios says it looked at the executive composition of more than 50 news companies, and none of them have a female C.T.O. Axios also says Szmajda will be the first female transgender C.T.O. of a notable media property. Szmajda, who transitioned in August 2017, hopes her hiring will be a step toward greater diversity within media corporate suites..."
 
 

Matthew Ball's must-read about "Fortnite"


"Fortnite" reportedly had 10 million concurrent users in virtual "attendance" for a Marshmello concert last weekend. The game has at least 200 million registered accounts. Matthew Ball says the game "likely represents the largest persistent media event in human history."

He also says it's "uniquely positioned to be the start of the Metaverse." Don't wait, read his essay for REDEF here...
 

FOR THE RECORD, PART TWO

 -- The LA Times' comeback continues: The paper will "resume publishing a stand-alone print section dedicated to food..." (NYT)

-- "A top Customs and Border Protection official apologized Tuesday" to BuzzFeed News reporter David Mack, "who was aggressively questioned by an agent about articles regarding President Donald Trump at a passport control checkpoint" at JFK the other day... (BuzzFeed)

 -- "Reddit is raising $150 million to $300 million to keep the front page of the internet running," Josh Constine reports... (TechCrunch)

 -- Nicholas Quah's latest: "Spotify buying Gimlet signals the start of something new in podcasting. Is that good or bad?" (NiemanLab)

 -- Should you be doing a "pivot to podcasts?" Simon Owens explores that question here... (WNIP)

 -- While Snopes "is reevaluating its relationship with the Facebook fact-checking unit," Facebook "is adding Lead Stories as a new fact-checking partner..." (Axios)
 

Viacom, Disney, Fox earnings

 
 -- Glass half full or half empty at Viacom? Revenue was up slightly in Q4 as "performance from Viacom's film and television studio helped offset a decrease in ad revenue for its cable TV business," the WSJ's Allison Prang reports...

 -- Later in the day, it was Disney's turn... "Earnings fell sharply compared to its first quarter a year ago, but it still beat Wall Street's expectations," Frank Pallotta reports...

 -- 21st Century Fox will report Q4 earnings on Wednesday morning...
 

No new info about Disney+


Via Pallotta's story: "Disney CEO Bob Iger told analysts on Tuesday's post-earnings call that the company will reveal more about its streaming strategy at its investor day on April 11."

--> "Presented with an overabundance of choice, consumers look to brands they know to sort through the options and find what they actually want," Iger said on the call. "We're confident that our iconic brands and franchises will allow us to break through the competitive clutter..."
 


The Post's new story about The Post's owner


Ever since Jeff Bezos announced his divorce and the National Enquirer published an embarrassing story about his love life, newspaper types have wondered how Bezos's paper would cover the story. Here's the answer: A sweeping story by senior editor Marc Fisher, feature reporter Manuel Roig-Franzia and media reporter Sarah Ellison.

Key graf: "Depending on whom you believe, the Enquirer's exposé on Bezos's affair was a political hit inspired by President Trump's allies, an inside job by people seeking to protect Bezos's marriage, or no conspiracy at all, simply a juicy gossip story." The story explains the "volley of charges and countercharges about how and why the Enquirer launched its investigation..." And says Amazon "declined The Post's request for an interview with Bezos." Read the full story here...
 
 

Jill Abramson doesn't record her interviews


Media Twitter was abuzz -- and aghast -- at this comment from Jill Abramson in her "How I Get It Done" interview with The Cut. Abramson's book "Merchants of Truth" came out on Tuesday, and since several people have pointed out inaccuracies in the text, this explanation about her note-taking process stood out:

"I do not record. I've never recorded," Abramson said. "I'm a very fast note-taker. When someone kind of says the 'it' thing that I have really wanted, I don't start scribbling right away. I have an almost photographic memory and so I wait a beat or two while they're onto something else, and then I write down the previous thing they said. Because you don't want your subject to get nervous about what they just said."

 --> Becket Adams' reaction for the Washington Examiner: "Dear reporters: Please, for the love of God, do not take advice from Jill Abramson..."
 

FOR THE RECORD, PART THREE

 -- Speaking of The Cut, here's how Stella Bugbee gets it done! (Folio)

 -- Oliver Darcy emails: Benny Johnson is leaving The Daily Caller, according to a memo sent out to staff on Tuesday. He has yet to say where he's heading next... (Twitter)

 -- CBS has renewed "Mom" for two more seasons... (Deadline)
 
 

Facebook removes 22 more pages connected to InfoWars


Oliver Darcy emails: Facebook on Tuesday removed 22 pages connected to conspiracy theorist Alex Jones and InfoWars. The move came as part of a broader effort by FB to enforce its recently updated recidivism policy. A spokesperson told me that 89 pages in total were unpublished on Tuesday as part of the crackdown. One of the pages connected to Jones that was unpublished Tuesday was a page called NewsWars, which amassed more than 30,000 followers before it was taken down. That said, Facebook said it will continue to allow Jones to operate his personal profile on the network...
 

Thinking ahead...


NBC's Ben Collins tweeted Tuesday: "The real test for Twitter/Facebook is going to come in the next few months, when some of these disinformation operations (domestic bots, adversarial foreign trolls) pick a candidate or two. They're gonna have to ban a disproportionate amount of supporters of one side. Will they?"
 

Headlines from ABC's day at TCA


Some news from the Television Critics Association's winter press tour:

-- The eleventh season of "Modern Family" will be the show's last...

 -- ABC's new entertainment president Karey Burke would be "interested in seeing" a "Lost" reboot...
 

ABC's Oscars plan


Brian Lowry emails: ABC confirmed the poorly kept secret that this will be a host-free Oscars, but Karey Burke seemed to stress the network's top priority -- namely, bringing the show in at a "brisk" three hours, when the Oscars have historically dragged on three-and-a-half hours or more. How the network and Academy trim the show's run time is the real question, one that has already produced plenty of grumbling.

 --> Separately, ABC announced that it will use the Oscars to preview a new drama, "Whiskey Cavalier," which will air that night after local news...
 
 

Liam Neeson laying low


Brian Lowry emails: Lionsgate has canceled the red carpet for the "Cold Pursuit" premiere, after Liam Neeson inexplicably waded into controversy by recalling thoughts about seeking race-based revenge after a friend was raped years ago, and his awkward clean-up efforts on "GMA." To call the whole situation unfortunate is an understatement...

 >> Peniel Joseph's piece for CNN Opinion: "How Liam Neeson's shame could do some good"
 

FOR THE RECORD, PART FOUR

 -- Kristoff St. John's fiancée, co-stars and fans are mourning his death...

 -- Fresh out of prison, rapper DMX is heading out on tour...

 -- "Bachelor" alum Bekah Martinez has welcomed her first child...
 
Thanks for reading! Email me anytime... See you tomorrow...
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