Jesse Watters thanked Trump for acting as “Fox News producer”
Summary
- Jesse
Watters thanked Trump for “producing” Fox News content. - The
comment came during Trump’s Antifa violence roundtable Wednesday. - The
roundtable included far-right influencers and “independent journalists.”
The MAGA host’s revelation only served to highlight the
ongoing feedback loop between the president and the conservative cable
behemoth, which typically involves Trump acting on what he sees on TV and then
amplifying those actions on Fox News.
“The mainstream media has probably never heard of any of
these people, and this is why this is such great programming,”
Watters
gleefully exclaimed during Wednesday’s broadcast of The Five.
The president invited a who’s who of right-wing activists
and social media stars to speak to senior Trump administration officials and
explain why Antifa, a leftist protest movement without an organizational
structure, should be classified as a foreign terrorist organization. The event
was almost specifically designed for Fox News and its MAGA audience.
Over the course of several hours, the president, Cabinet
members and his invited
guests all attempted to outdo each other with their attempts to paint Antifa as
not only a highly violent threat to the American people, but more dangerous
than international gangs and foreign terror groups.
“They are just as sophisticated as MS-13, as [Tren de
Aragua], as ISIS, as Hezbollah, as Hamas, as all of them. They are just as
dangerous,”
Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said.
“They have an agenda
to destroy us, just like the other terrorists we’ve dealt with for many, many
years.”
The president boasted that “we took the freedom of
speech away” from demonstrators, claiming that burning an American flag is
tantamount to instigating a riot, in addition to implying that Antifa would be
classified as a foreign terrorist organization and that “members”
would face harsh penalties.
Many of the internet celebrities gathered around the table
appeared to be competing to deliver the most bizarre soundbites, while the
president used the occasion to further defend his use of American military
forces to quell anti-immigration enforcement protests by focusing on the
nebulous group known as Antifa.
“If you’ll remember, those were the people taking issue with
the early versions of the Nazis. But it’s sort of difficult to position
yourself as the good guys if you’re aligning yourself with the Nazis in your
historical analogy,”
Holly Baxter observed.
Reacting to the off-the-wall roundtable during The Five,
co-host Martha MacCallum brought up a federal judge blocking the president’s
order to deploy other states’ National Guard troops to Portland, wondering if
Trump would soon enact the Insurrection Act so he can mobilize more military in
American cities.
After saying “we might have to see it” because
“Democrats
are not doing their job,”
Watters then pivoted to applauding the president for
producing content specifically aimed at the network’s viewers.
“It is funny to watch Trump be a Fox News producer,”
the
MAGA star gushed.
“We wake up in the morning, and we look at the news, and you
see Trump is holding an Antifa roundtable at the White House, and you just say
thank you. Thank you, Donald Trump.”
How did mainstream outlets cover the event differently?
These outlets characterized the roundtable as a serious and
necessary discussion to address the perceived threat of Antifa violence. Their
coverage praised Trump’s leadership on law and order, pointing to the
roundtable as a venue to expose leftist extremism.
Watters’ observation that Trump is a “Fox News producer” was
included for humorous context, underscoring the tight alignment between Trump
and Fox News messaging for their shared audience.
More critical coverage focused on the roundtable
participants being far-right and called into question the appropriateness of
the claim that “Antifa” constitutes a domestic terror threat. The event was
characterized as a political stunt and the amplification of extremist views and
misinformation was derided.