You may have seen that viral video compilation of almost 200 Sinclair anchors from across the country reciting the same lines, bashing other media outlets as “fake news.”
Kirk Clyatt, a former anchor at the network operator, told Cheddar the company has been exerting this type of editorial control for nearly two decades.
“I have real questions, even going back to 2001 before I noticed a real hard turn to the right, about what their real motivation is,” Clyatt told Cheddar.
Back then, one of the owners compelled a station “to do a story about pollution in the Potomac river in far western Maryland,” said Clyatt.
While seemingly innocuous, the family that runs Sinclair owned property on the river.
“They were board members of a coalition called ‘Safe Waterways Maryland,’ [but] none of...those facts were included in those stories.”
And that was just one example of the kind of biased slant the management at Sinclair imposed on journalists, Clyatt said.
“It happened after 9/11 when the anchors were compelled to make a statement about how they felt that they were supporting President Bush.”
Coverage across Sinclair Broadcast Group, founded and owned by the Smith family, is often unabashedly conservative and pro-Trump.
The company owns nearly 200 local TV stations, and it could get even bigger. The media giant is awaiting a nod from the Justice Department for its proposal to acquire Tribune Media, which would bring another 42 stations under its umbrella.
“There’s a tremendous fear in the newsroom,” said Clyatt.
For the full interview, [click here](https://cheddar.com/videos/former-sinclair-anchor-responds-to-backlash-facing-broadcast-group).
The NBA is organizing its next media rights deal to figure out which networks and streaming services will show their games for the next decade. Last time, most of the prominent streaming services didn't exist yet.
Jessica Traver Ingram, CEO and co-founder of IntuiTap Medical, discusses developing the company's Ver Touch device, the crucial FDA approval it just won, and why innovation in spinal blocks and epidurals is long overdue.
Matt Stucky, Chief Portfolio Manager of Equities at Northwestern Mutual Wealth Management chats why Nvidia has been unsteady leading up to its latest earnings results, plus what’s to come for the so-called ‘Magnificent 7.’
Walmart's revenue increased last quarter because customers kept coming back again and again. Are most shoppers buying and avoid the same products as you are?
NBA champion Kendrick Perkins and Edly founder Chris Ricciardi discuss working together to create Nilly, a new platform where fans can invest in name, image, and likeness deals of their favorite college athletes.
Off the back of their latest earnings results, Hungryroot CEO Ben McKean discusses how the company is bringing healthy food straight to customers' doors and how it's using A.I.