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Fox News and CNN are 2 of America's biggest news sources — but they couldn't be more different. Here's how they've changed in the past decade.

CNN used to be America's news " emergency room ," but over the last decade it became clear that it wasn't enough to compete with Fox News and MSNBC.

CNN's Jake Tapper and Fox News' Tucker Carlson.
  • Fox News has continued on an upward trend ratings-wise, but it's success has been through its anchor's opinions, and since 2010 it's lost a few of its biggest stars.
  • Here's how the two networks have changed in the last decade.
  • Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories.

It's been a big decade for CNN and Fox News.

CNN was launched in the 1980s. It made "news the star," and steered clear of politic bias. After defining itself with on-the-scene reporting during the Gulf War, for a long time, CNN was the nation's news "emergency room." People tuned in for breaking coverage of terrorist attacks or election results.

But as American media became more politically aligned, it wasn't enough. Coming into the 2010s, CNN was struggling. In 2013, former NBC head, Jeff Zucker was hired to run the network. Despite providing more political commentary, by October 2019, CNN settled into third place in viewer ratings, falling behind Fox News and MSNBC for the 10th quarter in a row.

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On CNN's political right, Fox News has continued its upward march in the ratings.Since 2002, it's been the most-watched cable news network in the country, in part because of the prescient plan put forth by its former CEO, Roger Ailes.

But Fox News is a brand based on personalities. And in the last few years, it's lost them. Ailes, its leader, and Bill O'Reilly, one of its most recognized anchors, were both booted after numerous sexual misconduct allegations became public. Megyn Kelly moved to NBC. In 2019, Shepherd Smith, a rare Fox News straight news presenter, left as well.

The other elephant in the room is President Donald Trump. Since 2016, viewership at both networks surged thanks to his presidency. But he's also accelerated the polarization of political media, boosting Fox News when it praises him and turning CNN into a punching bag on the right for remaining nonpartisan.

Here's how the two networks have changed over the last ten years.

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REUTERS/David Gray

It's no coincidence that Fox News' rise has relegated CNN to second or third place in ratings .

Before Fox News was created, its owner, Rupert Murdoch, had been "at odds" with CNN's founder Ted Turner for years. He wanted to beat and discredit CNN.

So, in a way, Fox News was forged out of enmity for CNN.

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CNN / Getty

CNN was an institution without overt political bias.

In 1991, it showed what it could do with its singular live coverage of the Gulf War . It reported from within Baghdad after all the other media organizations had left.

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Allan Tannenbaum/The LIFE Images Collection via Getty

It positioned itself as the network "for the unrepresented, for the outsiders," according to Terry McDermott in the Columbia Journalism Review. McDermott also wrote, "There is a strain of resentment, of put-upon-ness that pervades almost everything Fox puts on the air."

The future of the new network was taken seriously from the beginning. In the early years, it was investing about $80 million annually on operation costs.

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But in 2000, it was still operating with such loose production values that one of its reporters was caught picking his nose on camera .

Allan Tannenbaum / Getty

Its rise was due to chief executive Roger Ailes , and his producers, who knew how to develop simple narratives and deliver them effectively.

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Its tagline was " Fair & Balanced ."

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That enabled it to cover more original news than Fox.

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But its problem a significant one by 2010 was that while major breaking news provided ratings boosts, it wasn't enough to keep viewers coming back on a consistent basis.

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It had about a third as many reporters and editors. And other than an often-overlooked straight-shooting newsroom fronted by Shepherd Smith, its great strength was in opinion journalism.

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It was more of a talk-show network than a news network , and it thrived by filling a void of conservative media coverage.

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A poll conducted by the independent survey firm Public Policy Polling found Fox News was trusted by more than 50% , while CNN was sitting on 39%.

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Fox News ran a full-page ad in The Washington Post and The Wall Street Journal , which said "The Most Trusted Name In News," taunting CNN.

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The network finished well behind Fox News and MSNBC. The slump continued into March. Its anchors weren't doing well. In particular, Larry King, a 25-year stalwart , had lost almost half of his viewers in a year .

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He was failing to compete with MSNBC's Rachel Maddow and Fox News' Sean Hannity. But management said nothing would change.

Ross D. Franklin / AP

Joe Coscarelli wrote for the New York Magazine , "CNN may have been the original cable network, but it's simply not up to date with a time when news breaks mostly online and talking heads are for reinforcing already ingrained belief systems.

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Time Warner chief executive Jeffrey Bewkes finally called for changes. But one unnamed employee, echoing a common sentiment within the company, told The New York Times , "I can't figure out what the master plan is."

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She told the Columbia Journalism Review that while CNN star anchor Anderson Cooper was a good reporter, he was boring.

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"Would you watch an old guy talk rationally about a topic? Bet you'd rather watch two hot chicks who are smart and who disagree yell at each other," she said

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It ended up simply being a fight to be heard, not to convince anyone of a point of view. It was also seen as the point where Kelly's career bloomed at Fox News .

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CNN

Scott Collins wrote for the Los Angeles Times that the network was in a "seemingly unstoppable downward spiral."

News anchor Wolf Blitzer told Collins he thought people would come back to watch during the presidential election. But it wasn't enough. Although CNN finished 2012 with 670,000 viewers, an increase from its 2010 low of 564,000 viewers , it still wasn't enough.

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In 2008, Former Fox News vice president Bill Shine said that if Barack Obama became president, Fox News would become the voice of the opposition .

And that's the route it took. Barack Obama's reelection and the political climate helped Fox News grow .

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Zucker ran MSNBC, which became something of a left-wing alternative to Fox News's programming, albeit with a much smaller audience.

The polarization was a key reason why CNN, lodged in the middle, was getting drowned out.

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He wanted to unshackle the network from "war, famine, pestilence, and politics," then-CNN anchor Piers Morgan told Politico .

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CNN

One of his first changes was to cancel a struggling morning show and bringing on Chris Cuomo, a brash young anchor and the younger brother of New York governor's, Andrew Cuomo. He also hired Washington correspondent and anchor Jake Tapper.

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CNN

Zucker got rid of some of CNN's 9 p.m. talk shows to make space for a series of non-fiction shows. He wanted to replicate the success of a weekly travel program CNN aired, which was hosted by celebrity chef Anthony Bourdain .

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Kate Bolden, a CNN host told AP , "There was a real sense of energy when Jeff came in a new energy, a resurrection."

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The network had its first lineup overhaul since 2002, beginning with Megyn Kelly debuting her show "The Kelly Files." The changes were seen as Fox News softening its commentary-driven programming. Kelly was put in Sean Hannity's 9 p.m. slot, and Shepherd was brought in to be on call throughout the night.

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He was banking on Kelly becoming a member of the next generation of Fox News anchors. But not everyone agreed, and conservatives were worried Fox News was becoming too moderate .

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People like attorney Tamara Holder and former Bill Clinton strategist James Carville were frequent guests. But since they were always outnumbered, it looked like Fox News simply wanted to create fireworks on air rather than push a more diverse array of opinions.

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Screenshot / CNN

In 2013, she got a sizable pay-cut, going from $1 million a year between 2009 and 2012, to $250,000 a year.

Then, in 2015, her contract wasn't renewed.

There were a few reasons why Fox News dropped Palin . She was no longer as popular as she had been, but also the political climate had changed. It was a sign that the network was edging a little closer to the center.

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In 2014, Palin started "The Sarah Palin channel." Her aim was to provide a direct link between her and her supporters, with "no need to please the powers-that-be," NBC News reported .

Palin wasn't the only one trying to create a substitute to Fox News. Nor was she the first. A variety of alternatives were entering the right-wing media space, including Blaze, launched by former Fox News host Glen Beck, One America News Network which was launched in in 2013 , as well as Breitbart News, and CRTV.

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But none of these alternatives were big enough to pose a feasible threat to Fox News. While other mainstream alternatives were reluctant to take the network on, because entering the competition was expensive. No other company in the industry had the same resources as Rupert Murdoch's empire.

Another possible reason was that public companies didn't want the controversy of producing conservative news.

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According to Mediaite, CNN's ratings were lower than ever before .

Although, one story the network really honed in on was the disappearance of Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 . CNN's coverage even briefly pushed it past Fox News for a few hours. But CNN was also criticized for exploiting the story, especially anchor Don Lemon's use of a toy plane to illustrate a point.

Jonathon Ernst / Reuters

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It was also and not for the last time criticized for giving so much attention to then-Republican candidate Donald Trump.

Fox News

He showed how much power he had over the network when he refused to give in.

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Ailes was forced to side with Trump over Kelly, and Ailes had to call him and apologize .

AP Photo/Julio Cortez

The story of the alleged affair was later broken by the Wall Street Journal, another part of Murdoch's media empire.

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It was a tectonic moment for both networks.

For CNN, it spurred soul-searching about the network's wall-to-wall coverage of the president and whether it excluded certain political voices.

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For Fox News, it meant the network's audience and conservative base would be tethered to Trump for at least four more years.

Charles Rex Arbogast / AP

Although Trump refused to give CNN an interview, denouncing it as "fake news," 2016 was CNN's most profitable year ever. Its daytime audience rose by 50% , and its prime-time audience by 70%.

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After he won, Zucker apologized for airing so many of his rallies in the lead up to the election.

"We're not pro-Trump and we're not anti-Trump we're pro-truth," he said to the Los Angeles Times . "And I understand that pro-truth in this day and age can come off as anti-Trump."

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Courtesy of FOX News Channel's Justice with Judge Jeanine

For the first two years of Trump's term, the network amplified his presidency . And Trump tweeted out Fox's coverage, creating a feedback loop that saturated right-wing media.

Trump publicly talked about how often he watched Fox News, and he was happy to appear on it. By March 2019, he had appeared on Fox News 44 times.

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Going into the election, 19% of American voters called Fox News their primary news source, according to Pew Research . CNN was second, at 8%.

And after the election, in 2017, the White House briefing room placed Fox News' correspondent in the front row, sitting between CBS News and NBC News, which makes it difficult hard to argue that it wasn't mainstream .

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Nicole Hemmer, an assistant professor of Presidential studies at the University of Virginia's Miller Center, told The New Yorker it was the closest America has come to having state TV.

While Jane Mayer, who wrote The New Yorker piece, showed in an investigation that while it wasn't state television, Fox News was increasingly pulling Trump challengers from the airwaves.

The comparison wasn't helped with anchor Sean Hannity. At one point, he was reportedly speaking to Trump every night, keeping communications open, and their connection close. Hannity also speak on his behalf at a campaign rally, and the Washington Post called Hannity "the deputy chief of staff."

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Fox News

Ailes was forced to step down in 2016, due to allegations of long-term sexual harassment. He'd long been the target for Fox News' dissenters. But with him gone, there seemed to be a void of direction , which Trump coverage filled.

Colin Young-Wolff / Invision / AP

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"Before, it was conservative, but it wasn't crazy. Now it's just propaganda," he said . While The Washington Post columnist Jennifer Rubin said, "It's simply a mouthpiece for the President, repeating what the President says, no matter how false or contradictory."

Rainmaker Photo / Mediapunch / IPX / AP

In January 2017, Megyn Kelly, Ailes' hope for the future of Fox News, moved to NBC.

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A few months later, Bill O'Reilly was forced out, after it was made public the network had spent $13 million to settle sexual misconduct claims made against him.

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More than twenty people have gone between Fox News and Trump's organization, Business Insider's Grace Panetta reported .

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The list of those who went from working in the White House to Fox News included White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders, communications director Hope Hicks, and former ICE Director Thomas Homan.

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Shine was Roger Ailes' deputy or protege, and used to be Hannity's producer, before working his way up.

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Mayer said Hannity had put Shine in the White House , after introducing the pair, arranging a dinner, and pushing for it to happen. "So Sean Hannity has managed to get his best friend, a former president of Fox News, in the position that's incredibly useful to reporters, which is director of communication."

The list of people who went from Fox News to the White House included , Heather Nauret who went from anchoring "Fox & Friends," to the Trump administration. John Bolton, a long-time contributor to Fox News, before becoming Trump's National Security Advisor.

There's also Anthony Scaramucci, who lasted 10 days as White House communications director, after working as a Fox Business analyst.

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The network was trying to provide political diversity or "villains" to parry with its "heroes." But it often backfired.

CNN's had to fire multiple Trump-friendly commentators after they said or did controversial things. In 2017, Jeffrey Lord was fired for tweeting "Sieg Heil." Ed Martin, a Trump-supporting talk show host, was fired for calling other CNN contributors "black racists," and "rabid feminists."

According to Politico , what made the job so difficult to keep was that the position, "must be filled by somebody close to the president who is willing to repeat, amplify and explain the racist, insulting, inflammatory and conspiratorial things the president says on a daily basis."

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CNN

After a terror attack in New York where the attacker reportedly yelled out "Allahu akbar," Tapper said the phrase could be "beautiful."

Fox's website called Tapper's comment "outrageous," even as Tapper pointed out that the phrase is used on occasions like weddings.

Tapper didn't refrain from hitting back at Fox News. He said the network was following the "slime-coated path" of outlets like Infowars .

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According to The Washington Post , the two networks were attacking each other, turning its competitor's mistakes, ratings, and missteps into news stories, which while not unheard of, was reaching a new intensity in the Trump era. It was a sign of how polarized the two networks' had become.

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University of Southern California's Annenberg School of Communication's professor Gabriel Kahn told The Washington Post CNN was defining its audience by saying what it was not. Unlike Fox News, CNN wanted to make sure it wasn't seen as a partisan media outlet.

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As Kelefa Sanneh wrote for The New Yorker , "By criticizing the 'liberal' media, Fox News set the bait; any outlet that tried to rebut this criticism was, in a twisted way, corroborating it."

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In 2018, the network was bringing in about 2.4 million primetime viewers every night.

Anchors like Tucker Carlson and Sean Hannity led the way, stirring the pot. Hannity often called CNN "fake news" and said it suffered from TDS, which stands for Trump Derangement Syndrome .

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The network was having what Vanity Fair called a "Trump identity crisis," with the president beginning to tweet that it was time to find a new news outlet because Fox News wasn't working for "us" anymore, in reference to a Fox poll that said 51% of viewers wanted him impeached .

Instead, he was reportedly looking at smaller, more radical sites, like Brietbart and One America News Network .

Richard Drew, File via AP

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An opinion piece he wrote, began , "Donald Trump should not have been on the phone with a foreign head of state encouraging another country to investigate his political opponent, Joe Biden. Some Republicans are trying, but there's no way to spin this as a good idea."

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According to those inside the network, his departure was because he was sick of being attacked by Trump and his colleagues since he refused to bend to the whims of the president.

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But with Smith gone, Fox News' ability to argue that it produced unbiased coverage, alongside its opinion shows, was substantially weakened.

One Fox News staffer told The Daily Beast , "There's no room for news here anymore."

Screenshot via CNN

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In 2019, Emily Tamkin wrote for Columbia Journalism Review , "It's just that what is mostly reflected on the screenespecially during prime timeseems to be less news reporting, more punditry, more round tables, more horse-race politics, more talking heads, more interviews and interviewees yelling at each other, more that makes the news more confusing for the viewer (or at least for this viewer)."

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It hadn't found a way to beat Fox News .

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Even so, going forward, it won't be picking up viewers by repeating its 2016 presidential coverage in 2020.

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That way, the network could spread around coverage between the candidates and wouldn't seem like it supported a particular one.

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"I want us to make sure that we're telling the full and complete story so that no one wakes up the day after the election and is surprised by whatever happens," he said .

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But since the network is bringing in $2.7 billion a year, and has the best ratings in cable news, it's unlikely much will change right away.

See Also:

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SEE ALSO: 18 times Trump has criticized Fox News

DON'T MISS: Fox News and CNN covered the impeachment hearings very differently. Here are some of the biggest divergences.

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