An Atheist in the FOXhole: A Liberal's Eight-Year Odyssey into the Heart of the Right-Wing Media Audiobook | BooksCougar

An Atheist in the FOXhole: A Liberal’s Eight-Year Odyssey into the Heart of the Right-Wing Media Audiobook

An Atheist in the FOXhole: A Liberal’s Eight-Year Odyssey into the Heart of the Right-Wing Media Audiobook

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The “Fox Mole”-whose dispatches for Gawker made headlines in Businessweek, The Hollywood Reporter, as well as on THE BRAND NEW York Instances website-delivers a funny, opinionated memoir of his eight years at the unfair, unbalanced Fox Information Route working as a co-employee producer for Costs O’Reilly.

Imagine having to hide your true values just to maintain a job you hated. Right now imagine your job was producing the largest show on the biggest cable news route in the us, and you’ll get yourself a feeling of what life was about An Atheist in the FOXhole: A Liberal’s Eight-Year Odyssey in to the Heart of the Right-Wing Mass media like for Joe Muto. Being a self-professed bleeding-heart, godless liberal, Joe’s viewpoints clearly didn’t mesh with his employer-especially his direct supervisor, Costs O’Reilly.

So he did what any ambitious, career-driven person would do. He demolished his profession, spectacularly. He became Gawker’s so-called Fox Mole.

Joe’s posts on Gawker garnered a lot more than 2.5 million hits in one week. He released video footage and info that Fox Information never wanted shown, including some extremely unflattering video footage of Mitt Romney. The dragnet shut around him quickly-he was terminated within thirty-six hours-so his greatest material never made it online. Unlucky for his profession as the Fox Mole, but a treasure trove for publication readers.

An Atheist in the FOXhole has anything that liberals and Fox haters could desire: details about how Fox’s right-wing ideology is promoted through the entire channel; why particular perspectives and personalities will be the just types broadcasted; the bizarre tales Fox anchors in fact believed (and passed on to the general public); and tales of behind-the-scenes mayhem and mistakes, all part of reporting Fox’s version of the news headlines.

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