The O'Reilly Factor
The O'Reilly Factor | |
---|---|
Created by | Bill O'Reilly |
Starring | Bill O'Reilly (1996–present) |
Country of origin | United States |
No. of episodes | 2690 as of January 26, 2007 |
Production | |
Running time | 60 minutes |
Original release | |
Network | Fox News Channel |
Release | October 7, 1996 – Present |
The O'Reilly Factor is an American talk show on the Fox News Channel hosted by commentator Bill O'Reilly, who discusses current political and social issues with guests from opposing ends of the political spectrum. The show premiered in 1996, along with the Fox News Channel. It was previously known as the O'Reilly Report, and O'Reilly's first guest was General Barry McCaffrey, then the Director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy (or "Drug Czar").
The O'Reilly Factor is currently the highest rated show on cable news and the highlight of O'Reilly's career. O'Reilly is known for his confrontational interview style and strong opinions, for which the program has been both criticized and praised.
Format
The program is done "live to tape", meaning that unlike other Fox News Channel programs at night, The O'Reilly Factor is prerecorded. The program is live for breaking news or special events. The show usually tapes between 5 and 7pm Eastern Standard Time, although some guests are interviewed before the "live to tape" period and are slotted in the program as appropriate. (Some guests have suggested that interviews are edited after taping, although O'Reilly's producers insist that editing happens only when an interview exceeds the available length in a program of which the total is 43 minutes for an hour-long slot, once commercials and news breaks are added.)[1][2]
O'Reilly and his producers discuss potential topics twice a week.[3] A producer will research the story and book guests for O'Reilly, and an information packet will be produced with possible angles for O'Reilly to explore. The producers will often "pre-interview" the guest so that they know what potential points he will make.[4] For each show, O'Reilly with the assistance of his staff will produce a script with the words for the "Talking Points Memo" and "Most Ridiculous Item of the Day" segments, and points of discussion and questions for the guests that will appear on the program.
O'Reilly divides his show into titled segments, appearing in the following general order. Not all segments appear in all programs, and occasionally segments will repeat.
- Talking Points Memo: O'Reilly's commentary on a current event or the state of the country. This does not usually appear when there is a substitute host, although John Gibson, Laura Ingraham and Michelle Malkin have done it on occasion.
- Top Story: O'Reilly covers one of the most important stories of the day, with interviews with newsmakers, noted analysts, or Fox News Channel reporters. If there is nothing breaking, the Top Story will often expand on the subject covered in the Talking Points Memo with a guest that either rebuts or concurs with the memo.
- Impact: O'Reilly focuses on issues of crime and the law in this segment. Updates on criminal investigations, trials, and lawsuits are highlighted. Other times, issues relating to government relations and agencies are featured, as are stories about the Iraq War.
- Unresolved Problem: O'Reilly focuses on an issue which he feels is not sufficiently covered by other media.
- Personal Story: O'Reilly invites an author of a best selling book, a newsmaker thrust into the spotlight, someone who has experienced an event currently in the news, or someone who has interviewed a newsmaker. The goal of this segment is to have the guest relate his personal experiences about the topic.
- Factor Follow-Up: O'Reilly revisits an issue discussed in a previous edition of the Factor.
- Back of the Book: Various topics will be placed in this segment, which is one of the last segments (hence the name). The tone can range the gamut from extremely serious to light hearted.
- The Most Ridiculous Item of the Day: a brief segment highlighting something O'Reilly finds absurd, or in some cases, the direct opposite.
- Factor Mail: O'Reilly reads brief snippets of electronic mail sent to him. He frequently puts together letters that have opposite viewpoints on a particular segment. For instance, one letter will say O'Reilly was way too lenient toward a guest while the next will say he was way too hard on him.
Occasionally, the following segments appear:
- Children at Risk: O'Reilly covers issues relating to the health and well-being of children and adolescents.
- Factor Investigation: O'Reilly invites guests who have investigated a person or organization that O'Reilly dislikes.
- Fridays with Geraldo: Geraldo Rivera, of the Fox News-produced and syndicated Geraldo At Large, discusses a topic of interest to O'Reilly. Often, Geraldo comes on Thursdays, because O'Reilly frequently takes Fridays off. Sometimes its own segment; other times rolled into one of the above segments
- Bloviating with Bill: A regular viewer gets a chance to debate O'Reilly.
- Policing the ...: A segment where O'Reilly reviews several sources for normally outlandish content. the "the" in the name is usually followed up by "net" (Internet), or Media.
When O'Reilly cannot host the show, Fox News Channel selects his replacement. Depending on the substitute's time frame, the program may be live more often, especially with John Gibson. Sometimes a previous show is rebroadcast but this has become more rare to the point of not happening anymore. A notable interview will usually reair filling up one or more segments in a show with a guest host.
O'Reilly has had two call-in segments to his show: one immediately following and in response to Connie Chung's interview with Gary Condit and the other with Gary Bauer as his guest, pertaining to terrorism.
Audience
58% of O'Reilly's audience is over 50 years of age according to a Pew research poll[5] According to the daily show, most of his audience watches the show tweaked on crystal meth. Sad to hear. While O'Reilly calls himself an independent, he is considered by many to be conservative.[6] 68% of "The Factor's" regular viewers identify as conservative while 10% consider themselves liberal.[7]
Regular guests
- Newt Gingrich, former Speaker of the House.
- John Kasich, special guest host. Host of Heartland on Saturday.
- Michelle Malkin, Fox News contributor and frequent special guest host. Appears on Mondays and Fridays.
- Kirsten Powers, Fox News contributor, often paired with Malkin in segments. Appears on Mondays.
- Laura Schwartz, Democratic Strategist; often fills in for Malkin or Powers
- Jane Hall, Fox News contributor.
- Bernard Goldberg, Former CBS correspondent, recently paired with Hall in segments.
- Rachel Marsden, Canadian contributor.
- Dick Morris, Fox News political analyst, former advisor to Bill Clinton.
- Juan Williams, political contributor
- Colonel David Hunt, Military Adviser
- Greta Van Susteren, Host of On the Record
- Steve Doocy, co-anchor of Fox and Friends does Mondays Great American Culture Quiz
- Martha MacCallum, host of The Live Desk; does The Great American Culture Quiz with Doocy
- Wendy Murphy, child advocate
- Mary Katharine Ham, Internet Expect appears on Wednesdays.
- Jane Fleming, Executive Director of the Young Democrats of America
- Andrew Napolitano, Fox News senior judicial analyst.
- Megyn Kelly, co-anchor of America’s Newsroom appears Tuesdays with Hostin
- Geraldo Rivera, Fox News reporter at large. Host of Geraldo-At-Large on weekends. appears on Fridays
- Sonny Hostin, legal expert appears Tuesdays with Kelly
- Al Sharpton, civil rights activist
- Tonya Reiman, certified Hypnotist appears Tuesdays in the capacity as a body language expert
- Jill Dobson, News & Style Editor for Star Magazine
- Marc Lamont Hill, Assistant Professor of Urban Education at Temple University
- Tony Snow, special guest host (left after being appointed press secretary to U. S. President George W. Bush).
- Jesse Watters, Factor field producer
- Neil Cavuto, Your World with Neil Cavuto host, and frequent business advisory guest.
- Trent Stamp, president of Charity Navigator
- Laura Ingraham, talk radio pundit and frequent special guest host
- Dennis Miller, comedian appears on Wednesdays
- Robert Reich, fill in host, former Secretary of Labor in President Clinton's Administration.
- Lis Wiehl, former Federal Prosecutor and current Fox News Legal Analyst appears tuesdays with Kelly or Hostin (also co-hosts Wednesdays and Thursdays on O'Reilly's radio program)
Frequent topics
- National Security vs. the Infringement of Constitutional Civil Liberties
- Iraq War
- Iran's nuclear ambitions and alleged link to aiding terrorism in Iraq
- Jessica's Law - O'Reilly is pushing for legislation in all 50 states to pass the law, which proposes stricter measures for dealing with child sex offenders. He has states shaded based on which ones are supporting it and those that resist it.
- "Traditionalists" vs. "Secular-progressives" - O'Reilly discusses a culture war between these two lines of thinking.
- Illegal Immigration
Criticism
The O'Reilly Factor has frequently been criticized by liberal groups as biased. Media Matters for America published a study which methodically counted the affiliations of guests brought onto the Factor for the first three months of 2006 and found that more than 66% of political guests were conservative or Republican, while less than a third were liberal or Democrat.[8] Neither O'Reilly nor the Factor have responded to the Media Matters study.
O'Reilly has been known to cut off the microphone of guests who he believes are spinning too much. Media Matters has said that O'Reilly has done this at least 11 times.[9]
O'Reilly was one of the subjects of the 2004 documentary, Outfoxed: Rupert Murdoch's War on Journalism. In the documentary, Peter Hart (a media analyst for the progressive Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting) said that "the O’Reilly factor is probably the perfect example of everything that’s wrong with Fox News Channel. They have stories that are selected primarily to upset liberals and Democrats and prop up the Republican Party. You have a hostility towards guests that disagree with the host and you have a host who in service of his conservative politics will distort facts, will misrepresent things, and will in some cases, just fabricate." [10]
Parodies
On 2005, The Colbert Report premiered on Comedy Central. The show, hosted by Stephen Colbert, is a satirical spoof of The O'Reilly Factor, spoofing its format and the mannerisms and ideology of O'Reilly, whom Colbert calls "Papa Bear." Colbert makes no secret of his spoofing O'Reilly: upon hearing the news that O'Reilly approved of The Colbert Report, Stephen declared on-air that "I like you too. In fact, if it wasn't for you, this show wouldn't exist." Many of Stephen Colbert's attitudes, actions, or program segments are directly inspired by O'Reilly's show. Colbert calls the character based on Bill O'Reilly "a well-intentioned, poorly informed, high-status idiot".[11] On 18 January 2007, Stephen Colbert appeared on the O'Reilly Factor and Bill O'Reilly appeared on the Colbert Report.[12][13]
The O'Reilly Factor has also been spoofed on Saturday Night Live, first by Jeff Richards and later on by Darrell Hammond. On Mad TV it was Michael McDonald doing the honors. O'Reilly himself has appeared on Mad TV as a judge on an American Idol parody [citation needed].
In addition, The O'Reilly Factor has been parodied on South Park in the episode Goobacks.
In The Political Machine, a show that you can appear on while running for president is called "The O'Malley Factor".
Radio disc-jockey Mike O'Meara of the Don and Mike Show does a impersonation of his voice and mannerisms on occasion during the show.
The Australian show CNNNN, which aired from 2001 to 2004, had a segment called The Firth Factor in which Charles Firth, a member of the Chaser comedy team would talk about an issue. Firth would use over the top comparisons (such as dipping a paper heart in a can of black paint and claiming: "This is how black Saddam Hussein's heart is") and outrageous statements to parody O'Reilly and Australian celebrities. Topics included the Iraq War, evil environmentalists, corporate high flyers, drugs and refugees.
People who decline to appear on The Factor
O'Reilly has invited onto the show people who have been critical of him (or vice versa) and/or dealing with a controversial situation that have declined or ignored the invitation. Some that have been invited but have not gone on include Barack Obama, Hillary Clinton, Jane Fonda, Rosa Brooks, Paul Krugman, Don Imus, Cory Booker, Snoop Dogg, Bill Moyers,[14] and Nicholas Kristof.[15] Two people who refuse to go on The Factor ever again are Michael Moore, citing that O'Reilly was "too mean" to him on his last visit to the show[citation needed], and Dick Cheney, whom O'Reilly believes does not want to answer any tough questions. [16]
It is said that actor Alan Alda is "welcome anytime" on the show but declines to appear because "he is not a fan" (quotes from Bill O'Reilly responding to a letter from a viewer who asked if Alan Alda would be appearing).[citation needed]
People not allowed on The Factor
The neutrality of this section is disputed. |
- David Brock: President of Media Matters for America has written a letter asking to be a guest on The Factor after O'Reilly repeatedly criticized him on the show.[17]O'Reilly has not responded.[18] Media Matters for America also quoted O'Reilly saying he would never have anyone from their organization on his show.[19]
- Al Franken: Despite almost constant criticism and refusing to use his real name (referring to him as Stuart Smalley, a character Franken created and played on Saturday Night Live) O'Reilly has not had Franken on since the publication of Lies and the Lying Liars Who Tell Them: A Fair and Balanced Look at the Right, a book highly critical of O'Reilly and his colleagues at the Fox News Channel.[20][21]
External links
- "The O'Reilly Factor" Official Website
- Bill O'Reilly's Official Website
- The O'Reilly Factor on TV.com
- Bill O'Reilly's visit to The Colbert Report
References
- ^ "Greenroom Confessions - boise weekly". 2005.
- ^ "Bill O'Reilly.com behind the scenes Q/A".
- ^ "Bostonia - BU alumni quarterly". 2001.
- ^ "Accuracy in media report". 2003.
- ^ "Pew Research Center Report - Maturing Internet News Audience Broader Than Deep". 2006.
- ^ http://www.oreilly-sucks.com/
- ^ "Pew Research Center Report - Maturing Internet News Audience Broader Than Deep". 2006.
- ^ "mediamatters.com - Progressives Factored out". 2006.
- ^ "mediamatters.com - O'Reilly interview tactic - cutting the guests mike". 2005.
- ^ "outfoxed - transcript pgs 49-50" (PDF).
- ^ Solomon, Deborah. "Funny About the News". New York Times Magazine.
- ^ Stephen Colbert Enters the No Spin Zone. Foxnews.com Published . Last Retrieved .
- ^ Bill O'Reilly Pt. 1. ComedyCentral.com January 18, 2007. Last Retrieved .
- ^ "ABC news - Bill O'Reilly calls himself T-warrior -".
- ^ "Sympathy for Bill O'Reilly". 2006.
- ^ http://abcnews.go.com/2020/story?id=2465303&page=3
- ^ "mediamatters.com - letter from David Brock to Bill O'Reilly". 2004.
- ^ "mediamatters.com - Take Action Page". 2004.
- ^ "mediamatters.com - Bill O'Reilly calls mediamatters paid assasins for George Soros". 2005.
- ^ "mediamatters.com - Bill O'Reilly's enemy list avail on hardcover $26". 2006.
- ^ "mediamatters.com - Bill O'Reilly compares hollywood to Nazi Faithful". 2004.