Divide and Conquer: The Story of Roger Ailes (2018) Movie Script

Glenn Beck: I think there was
a real tear inside of Roger.
This wanting to be liked,
wanting to be somebody.
He said, "I'm writing a book
about my life for my son
because when I go
people are gonna say
awful things about me
and I want him to know that
that's not all his dad was."
I think Roger thought
he could control
the little genie in the bottle,
and he couldn't.
And here we are.
It's easy to make somebody
into a monster.
It's hard to see
that you're on that path too.
Bret Baier: We are
about four hours away
from history here in Cleveland.
A man with no previous political
experience, a real estate mogul,
a reality TV star,
a millionaire businessman
is about to take his place
at the top
of the GOP presidential ticket.
Sarah Ellison: It was a big
moment of triumph forFox News.
Joe, what an amazing moment.
This is emotional.
all : We want Trump!
We...
It was unthinkable
that Donald Trump
as a candidate
would exist without them.
About an hour from now,
Mr. Trump and his family
will arrive here
via his helicopter
and they will quite literally
hover over our cameras.
It was like a hall of mirrors.
You couldn't look anywhere
and not see Roger.
He had his people everywhere
operating behind the scenes.
People who were
extremely loyal to him
and who would defend him
with every little weapon
they had in their arsenal.
Alisyn Camerota:
He was the king.
A powerful, influential person
who changed the country.
And the Republican Convention
should've been
this crowning moment for Roger.
But instead,
he was embroiled in chaos.
Steve Kornacki: Actually,
stand by, David
we'll hold you over
to the next block,
and I'll tell all our viewers
at home why.
It's because we have some
breaking news here.
This is very big news
from the world of politics,
the world of media.
And the news is that
Roger Ailes has now resigned
as chairman and CEO
of the Fox News Channel
and Fox Business Network.
The man who created conservative
leaning Fox News two decades ago
was forced out over allegations
of sexual harassment.
I'm Gretchen Carlson.
male anchor #1:
Journalist Gretchen Carlson
taking onFox News chairman
and CEO, Roger Ailes.
female anchor #1: Ailes called
Carlson's allegations
offensive and defamatory,
and said that they would be
vigorously defended.
He said, "We are going to blow
these people out of the water.
We are gonna destroy them."
"And she'll be sorry
she ever started this thing."
male reporter #1: Roger almost
single-handedly built
Fox News Channel
from absolutely nothing
into the most-watched
news operation in all of cable.
Fox anchor #1: Revolutionary
in American politics,
shaper of American history.
female reporter #1:
He was in the Nixon White House,
worked on the re-election
campaign for Ronald Reagan.
You could really credit
Roger Ailes
with helping to create
three Republican presidents.
Ivanka Trump: And I could not
be more proud tonight
to present to you
our next president
Donald J. Trump.
female reporter #2: It's ironic
that on the eve
of Donald Trump's coronation
as the Republican nominee,
the ultimate Republican
kingmaker, Roger Ailes
is to have his kingdom
taken away.
male announcer #1:
Ladies and gentlemen
the next president
of the United States
Mr. Donald J. Trump!
Roger Ailes:
My personal view is
we have a desperate need
to return to the basics
common sense things
we all learned as kids:
God, family, country,
pay the bills, work hard,
help your neighbor.
The New York
and Hollywood elites,
they think their job is to drag
the rest of the redneck morons
toward the light.
They don't understand
the people
that grew up with values.
Austin Pendleton: I first met
Roger Ailes
in junior high school,
in civics class.
We would have debates about
like, the race between
Eisenhower and Stevenson
and I was
a closet Stevenson person.
But the arguments
that Roger would make
in favor of Eisenhower
were so persuasive
that I thought, "I don't agree
with you, but I see your point."
We all wanted to be like Roger.
He was witty and intelligent.
Mercilessly funny.
Also, Roger was the handsomest
young man you can imagine.
Launa Newman: Warren was
a beautiful, clean,
wonderful city.
Everywhere you looked,
there was something historic
or, you know,
traditional or patriotic.
And you felt it.
It was part
of being from Warren, Ohio.
Austin Pendleton: Roger's father
was a factory foreman,
and he was
a very important figure to him.
He was like one of those
prophets from the Old Testament.
Very stern.
Roger Ailes:
I was terrified,
but I loved my dad.
His father was a union man
who hated the unions.
Who-- who was frightened
of the unions.
He said to Roger,
"Mark my words.
The liberals
will destroy this town."
Now, it's unfair to say
that they did that,
but in the '70s,
that prophecy came true.
And Roger saw
all the industry move out.
Their livelihood was gone.
Overnight.
And he saw the pride
that people had
disappearing too.
Austin Pendleton: Roger lived
his whole life in fear.
A physical, real fear
of bleeding to death.
He had hemophilia diagnosed
when he was about
four years old.
But he was a survivor.
And he operated fearlessly,
like a lot of people
who have real fears often do.
Roger Ailes: I had a condition
that was passed through women.
In other words, the mother
has to give you hemophilia.
I don't know that that had
anything to do with it,
but I was never particularly
physical with my mother.
I think she was scared of it.
She may have had some feeling
about the fact
that I got it from her.
Austin Pendleton:
Roger's daily life
was a fear of annihilation.
He said, "It's like
you walk around all your life
with a time bomb in you."
And I think this allowed him
to understand the fears
of other people.
You're in danger,
I'm in danger.
We're at war,
and this is not going to stop.
We gotta understand
what's in our country
and take out the people
that wanna see us die.
You're seeing them come
out of the shadows, the caves...
Picture is really shocking.
Jihad right here
on our own soil.
This is the ultimate battle
of good versus evil.
We need to kill them.
We need to kill them.
If a picture paints
A thousand words
Then why can't I paint you?
Roger Ailes:
I used to be a production
assistant for Mike Douglas.
I ran sandwiches for the stars,
and I moved up quickly.
I learned
if your audience likes you
they'll forgive just about
everything else you do wrong.
The Mike Douglas Show
was the only daytime talk show
uh, at the time.
And we did it
five days a week live.
I bought it
At a second-hand store
I co-created
The Mike Douglas Show,
and I booked all the big stars.
Look, the pig that I am today.
Kenneth Johnson:
Every actor in a movie,
a lot of directors
would come through.
Plus, there were animal acts.
And, obviously, there were
a lot of dieting segments
and that sort of thing.
- Oh, something's on fire here.
- It'll go out.
Launa Newman:
It was just fun.
Kenneth Johnson:
Roger was an associate producer
on the show,
and a guy named Larry Rosen
was really next in line
to be the producer.
Launa Newman: He was
the first producer hired.
He'd been on the show
the longest, next to me,
and it was obviously
gonna be Larry. Uh-uh.
Kenneth Johnson:
Roger convinced Mike
that he would be
the better producer than Larry.
And Roger became the producer
of The Mike Douglas Show.
And that was a big shock
because you couldn't see him
maneuvering.
The only person that I saw
Roger Ailes ever really hit on
was Richard Nixon.
Kenneth Johnson: In 1968, during
the presidential campaign,
when he was going to be running
against Bobby Kennedy,
Nixon came to Philadelphia
because, like all politicians
he recognized the impact that
The Mike Douglas Show had
on millions of people.
Why, you look wonderful.
You're suntanned,
you're rested-looking.
Yes.
Have you ever regretted
entering politics
at such a, an early age?
No, um, politics, of course,
is a, is a great battle.
Uh, all of life
is a great battle.
- Indeed, yes.
- You're really a riot.
Kenneth Johnson:
After the show was over,
Roger pulled Nixon
into his office
just the two of them, and said,
"You need a media advisor."
"What's a media advisor, Roger?"
And Roger said, "I am.
It's a title I just created.
You need someone
that can shape you,
that can make you presentable
and the most palatable
you can possibly be
and get you elected president."
And Nixon believed him.
So Roger, very soon after,
left the show
and went off
to produce Richard Nixon.
Roger Ailes:
Let's face it, a lot of people
think Nixon is dull.
They think he's a bore,
a pain in the ass.
We have a sound dollar...
They look at him
as the kind of kid
who always carried the book bag
who was 42 years old
the day he was born.
They figure other kids
got footballs for Christmas,
Nixon got a briefcase,
and he loved it.
...projects that otherwise
would be feasible.
Nixon needed someone
who had knowledge of
and command
of the use of television.
And that, of course,
was reinforced
by what had happened to him
in 1960.
Felycia Sugarman: That was
the Nixon-Kennedy debate
where Nixon loses to Kennedy
because he sweats on television.
Pat Buchanan: He looked bad.
He had not put on makeup.
And even his own mother
was calling in
and asking how her son was.
Was he okay?
Felycia Sugarman:
And, of course, Kennedy went on
to become president.
So Roger told Nixon
"If you don't take television
seriously this time
you're gonna lose again."
Roger Ailes:
I'm gonna fire this fucking
director right after the show.
I mean, look at the positioning
of these cameras.
I told him 50 times,
"I want close-ups."
Close-ups.
I wanna see faces.
I wanna see pores.
That's what people are.
That's what television is.
I don't give a fuck
about the seats.
I gave up 30 seats
to get a tight show.
Kenneth Johnson: Roger and I
had had many conversations
about the power
of, uh, the media
and particularly,
the great Nazi propaganda film
by Leni Riefenstahl,
Triumph Of The Will.
And I talked to Roger a lot
about the specific
camera angles that she used
to make Hitler seem heroic
and about putting it
in the right kind of setting
which made it so powerful.
And Roger told me
he really thought about that
when he created for Nixon, um
"The Man In The Arena."
male announcer #2:
Tonight from Philadelphia,
live and in color,
Nixon In Pennsylvania.
Tonight, Richard Nixon,
in person, is going to face
a panel of citizens asking
questions they want answered.
Kenneth Johnson:
He put him in the arena
surrounded by the audience.
And, uh, it was
an amazing propaganda piece.
I'd like to stress the point
that this is a live program.
male announcer #3:
No one has any idea
what questions will be asked.
Mr. Nixon
cannot possibly know.
male announcer #2:
Tonight from Atlanta,
The Nixon Answer.
You have to have the big stroke
of the federal government
in order to handle
a particular problem like that.
Richard Nixon.
We've got the power, we've got
a wonderfully motivated people.
male announcer #3:
Richard Nixon.
Well, anyway, uh...
male announcer #4:
With 287 electoral votes
Richard Nixon goes over the top
to win the 1968 election.
Good evening.
I'm Mike Wallace.
For better or worse,
television has changed
the nature of the political
process in the United States.
Right. Okay.
This year,
another innovation was tried.
The controlled discussion
with the questioners
picked
by the candidate's producer.
male anchor #2:
Roger Ailes was that producer.
And in the book,
The Selling Of The President,
he was given a good share
of the credit
for the successful format.
male #1: In your estimation,
is television
the single most important factor
in a winning political campaign?
Let me put it this way,
I don't believe
any, anyone will ever be elected
to a major public office again
including mayors of big cities
without the skillful use
of television.
And that skillful use
is that an illumination
of the issues
or an emotional sell
of the man involved?
I think both.
I think both. I don't think you
can isolate one or the other.
I think that there's
an emotional reaction
to what you see on the screen
regardless of what it is.
John Cook: When I was first
reporting on Fox News
everyone knew
what Roger Ailes' history was.
That he was an aide to Nixon
and-and other
Republican presidents,
but it was kind of
below the radar.
So I filed information requests
with the Nixon archives.
And one of the things
that I discovered
was this astonishing document
called A Plan
To Put The GOP On TV.
Its author is unclear.
However, the copy I obtained
had Roger Ailes' handwriting
all over it
in notes that were directed
to H.R. Haldeman,
a-a top aide
in the Nixon White House.
And the memo said
the liberal elite
has a chokehold
on the national news networks,
but local television stations
in Wisconsin
and in Utah
have their own news programs
and they are hungry
for footage.
So it was a proposal
that the Nixon White House,
with taxpayer dollars,
fund an operation
that would interview
Republican members of Congress,
in Washington,
and fly the footage
to these local stations
so that they can get a message
out to their constituents
without having to rely
on the institutional press.
And Roger Ailes is all over it
saying, "I can do this."
Now, it never happened,
but the idea
the germ goes straight into
what Fox News is all about.
...our immigration could be...
How do we get a message
to the people
without having to go through
a critical press?
I think that Roger
was a kind of genius,
in the sense
that he created something
that didn't exist before.
And I think that there
is a "Citizen Kane" quality
to his life.
And I remember
he told me this story
that when he was a boy,
he and his brother had bunk beds
and Roger was on the top bunk
and his dad walked in
and opened up his arms and said
"Jump, Roger. Jump."
And Roger jumped
and his father stepped away
and Roger fell on the ground.
And his father
looked down on him and he said
"Don't trust anybody."
And I still have an image
of Roger's face
when he would tell me that.
I felt like he was searching.
He was like, "How could my dad
do that to me?"
So there was a lot anger.
There was a lot of anger.
And I think
he capitalized on that.
male #1 on TV: Al D'Amato,
a family man fighting...
male #2 on TV: Deukmejian,
the difference is leadership.
I'm Dan Quayle. I'm very
optimistic about our future.
Felycia Sugarman:
Ailes Communications did
political media consulting
for congressional races,
senatorial races
gubernatorial races.
And we were a small team
doing 14 races
in 14 different states
simultaneously.
Stephen Rosenfield: We did
a lot of executive coaching
and we did political coaching.
And because
of the Nixon campaign
and the fact that he had
pulled that thing off,
you were lucky to get him
and you had to keep him happy.
- man #1: How is that, Roger?
- man #2: Stand by.
male anchor #3:
As Jefferson County Judge,
Mitch McConnell won
national recognition
for exceptional leadership.
Felycia Sugarman:
Mitch McConnell was a judge.
He was way down in the polls.
He was going to lose.
And Roger was hired
to do a bunch of commercials.
So we were doing
a fishing spot
and we had him in the boat,
fishing rod in hand.
We put a worm and a fish
on the hook
reeled it into the water
and then we hear
this little voice go
"What do I do now, Rog?"
And it was Mitch McConnell.
And Roger looks at me
and I look at him and Roger says
you know, "Reel in the fucking
fish, Mitch."
Mitch didn't move
without listening to Roger.
And a month later,
he's a U.S. senator.
I'm here with Roger Ailes
who has been called
the Ernest Hemingway
of campaign advisors.
male anchor #4:
The bearded veteran
of many political wars
Roger Ailes,
arrives early this morning
for a final day of practice.
Bo Dietl:
From 1984 to 1988
Roger was the absolute number
one Republican strategist.
male anchor #5: Roger Ailes,
former TV man for Nixon
was seen here in South Dakota
this fall.
Felycia Sugarman:
We were in every state
in the country
and Roger was a pivotal figure
in getting Ronald Reagan
elected.
He was like a kingmaker.
And he knew that he could blow
his opponents out of the water.
And that's what he did.
Stephen Rosenfield: I remember,
I came into the office one day,
and he said, "You may have
to take over for a few days
because I was arrested.
Um, I was carrying a gun
in Central Park
so I may go to jail."
And I didn't know he had a gun.
But Roger was,
you know, he was a maverick,
he was a bad boy,
and, uh, he liked that.
Roger Ailes: I know you've heard
people are afraid of me.
I don't remember
threatening anybody.
But if somebody comes to me
looking for a fight
they might get one.
My dad taught me how to fight.
He said, "Remember, son,
for them, it's a fight,
for you, it's life or death."
female anchor #2: And now
to tonight's Focus '88 coverage
of the race
for the White House.
President Reagan
is stopping in Texas
trying to help the George Bush
for president campaign.
female anchor #3: An NBC News-
Wall Street Journal poll
shows Dukakis beating Bush
by 15 points in a head-to-head.
- Try with the glasses.
- producer: Five seconds.
Bush has already initiated
damage control.
Big Rog, how are you, pal?
I'm glad to see you.
Diane Donati:
First thing I did was
with, uh, George H.W. Bush.
Roger was running an ad
for a production manager.
And when I realized what it was
which was Republican commercials
I said, "I don't think
I really want this."
I was always very liberal,
but, um, I needed a job.
What's going on?
Vice President Bush
was a real gentleman.
And I don't think he understood
the down and dirty,
the world Roger could relate to.
Roger always knew
the lowest common denominator
in people.
He knew how to strike at that.
And I think
that's why George used Roger.
He needed a bulldog,
he needed somebody
who could play that game.
And that might have been
the beginning of it,
of the negative,
really negative ads.
male #2:
Which candidate for president
gave weekend passes
to first-degree murderers
who were not even eligible
for parole? Michael Dukakis.
male #3: Dukakis not only
opposes the death penalty
he allowed
first-degree murderers
to have weekend passes
from prison.
One was Willie Horton
who murdered a boy in a robbery
stabbing him 19 times.
Despite a life sentence,
Horton received
ten weekend passes from prison.
Horton fled, kidnapped a young
couple, stabbing the man
and repeatedly raping
his girlfriend.
Weekend Prison Passes.
Dukakis On Crime.
The message
of the Willie Horton ad was
"If you elect Michael Dukakis,
he's going to let all
these black men out of prison
to come and stab your children,
rape your wives."
- It's true.
- You think it's racist?
No, I don't think it's racist.
I think the man I see there
is neither black nor white.
If you put a white man up there,
would that be racist?
But it has that effect
of scaring the dickens
- out of white people, right?
- Well, the Bush campaign
had absolutely nothing to do
with that ad.
In fact, I wish
it'd never have aired.
Sarah Ellison: He says
he didn't do the first one
the most controversial ad.
But he certainly promoted
the entire storyline
of Willie Horton
and scary black men.
male #4: While out,
many committed other crimes.
It was revolutionary
at the time, and it worked.
male announcer #5:
Ladies and gentlemen,
the president
of the United States.
Felycia Sugarman: There are only
a handful of people
who can so critically
affect the power in this country
over decades.
And Roger's
absolutely one of them.
And when you think
about the people
who are running the country
even now,
all these senators
and congressmen,
he put them there.
Diane Donati:
That's definitely Roger
because his story is about
Nixon or everybody else.
It was what he did for them,
how he made them, you know.
W-Without them, they would
not be where they are.
Felycia Sugarman:
And so everyone wanted to be
in his sphere. Everybody.
You know,
he, he was the big guy, right?
Um, did he take advantage
of that?
I don't, I don't know.
I don't know.
Diane Donati:
"Everybody has an agenda."
He used to say that a lot.
And you have to see what it is
that they're after.
And then you can manipulate them
that way.
I think he liked to pick
on the people
who needed him,
who were vulnerable.
Not just women,
but women were easy targets.
You know, and-and,
but anybody who looked up to him
who wanted to be there,
you know, who thought
"Oh, I'm at the,
you know, top of my game
if I'm working with Roger."
Like, Judy, his secretary,
she worshipped him.
And I knew
anything I said to her
was basically talking in his ear
at the same time, so...
Alexis:
Was she his mistress then?
I can't say that I saw it
specifically, but there were...
I mean, it seemed
a universal acceptance
that everybody knew it
and it was just a giggle.
His wife, Norma, was already
staying at home a lot.
She'd do a little bit
in the editing room and stuff,
but Judy was in constant
contact with her.
And I think that he kind of
liked that he could sort of
play the mistress off the wife
and the wife off the mistress.
I think he was very insecure,
and he needed that feeling
of having a harem.
You know, it's like,
"Look at me. Look at me.
I got 'em both and they do
what I want 'em to do."
Roger Ailes:
My assistant can look at a room
and say, "Watch the fourth guy
on the left.
He hates your guts."
Oh, she can read a room.
She goes in,
she's very friendly
asks if they want coffee
and they think
she's the secretary.
But she's reading the room
before I go in.
Kellie Boyle:
I was a big fan of Roger Ailes.
I had read his book, and
in my industry, he was the man.
My husband was working
with CNBC.
And he said,
"Roger Ailes is coming in.
Would you like to meet him?"
So I thought
that sounded wonderful.
We met in a restaurant
at Union Station
and had a nice meeting.
And I mentioned to Roger that
I was going to sign a contract
with one
of the big national committees.
And this was
a career-making contract.
Um, o-once you hit that level,
uh, you'd made it.
But once we got into his car
we barely pulled away
from Union Station
and he leaned over and said,
"I can really help you,
but if you wanna play
with the big boys,
you have to lay
with the big boys."
It just came out of nowhere
and it was very transactional.
So at one point,
I sort of sarcastically said,
"Well, now, would I have to be
anybody else's special friend?"
And he said, "Well, you might
have to give a few blowjobs
here and there, but everyone
will know you're with me."
And a million thoughts
are going through my head.
How do I get out of this?
Because I didn't wanna
offend him
and risk some kind of struggle
in the backseat.
So I just said, uh...
"I'm-I'm gonna think about it
and I'll get back to you."
And he said, "Well, you know,
if you don't agree now
there's a good chance
you won't later on."
And I said, "Well, we're just
gonna have to take that risk."
So I dropped him off and, uh,
I just remember,
uh, shaking on the way back
thinking, "Oh...
why did that happen?
What? Why do I have
to put up with that?
Why? Why?" You know...
So the next morning,
I thought, "That's behind me.
I'm not gonna see him again."
So I went to the national
committee for my meeting,
which I had confirmed
the day before.
And I got to the, uh,
the front desk,
and they said, "Oh, he's busy."
I said, "That's strange."
And, um, the next day,
I got a call from Roger Ailes
at home, my home,
and he said,
"How did your meeting go?"
And I said, "Well, very
strangely, it-it didn't happen."
Um, and he said, "Oh,
you'll probably hear from them.
Um, what did you decide?"
And I said, um,
"I'm gonna have to pass, Roger.
Uh, it's just not something
I'm comfortable with."
And, uh, he said,
"Okay, that's, that's fine.
Good luck with everything."
I said,
"Yeah, fine. Okay, good."
So, I hung up and, um
didn't really think
a whole lot more about it
except I wasn't getting
any of my calls returned
to the national committee.
And after a couple of weeks,
I thought
"There's something wrong here."
So I asked a friend
to ask around,
and he called me back
very quickly afterwards
and said,
"You're on a no-hire list."
I thought, "A no-hire list?"
And then all of sudden,
it all fit into place.
That's what Roger had done
and...
...that was the end of my
career.
If you wanna have
tremendous political influence
and still be a womanizer,
drug abuser and alcoholic,
you only have one choice
of career and that's journalism.
Because journalists
won't attack each other.
They only attack
all the rest of us.
And anybody who denies it
is lying.
Glenn Meehan: I first met
Roger Ailes in the early '90s
when he was starting
an all-talk network
calledAmerica's Talking.
And I think Roger wanted
to be known during this time
as an incredible TV executive,
not a politician.
We congratulate Roger
on his new position
as Geraldo Rivera's boss.
I'm politically correct now.
It was an image thing
and he really wanted
to bury his political past.
First, I wanna ask you,
why a talk network?
You know, it seems
that talk shows, uh, come and go
the networks
are saturated with them.
Why does this seem
a good direction to go?
There is a certain segment
of our society
uh, who-who really want to watch
other Americans
talking about things
they care about.
And, um,
I think you're gonna see
a big audience develop
for this kind of thing.
announcer: America's Talking,
a new form of news.
America's Talking
was Roger's baby.
And every single host,
every single show idea,
was from Roger's mind.
He created 12 hours of TV live.
That's almost insane.
E. Jean on TV:
Today onAsk E. Jean...
And I would say
horrible, hideous stuff
about how some women are able
to ejaculate like men.
Roger didn't care.
As long as the show was juicy
and interesting,
he was all for it.
Hello, I'm Terry Anzur...
Short skirts were encouraged,
and on America's Talking,
I had a see-through desk.
And underneath were lights
that shined on my legs.
They didn't put the light
on Chris Matthews' legs.
- Goodnight, Chris.
- Goodnight, Terry.
You know, when I look back
at America's Talking
I realize that there was so much
that you saw on Fox later on.
The mainstream media
in America
is biased and abusive
in their...
Glenn Meehan: A lot of people
don't know that Sean Hannity
started onAmerica's Talking
covering the O.J. trial.
Hello, I'm Bill O'Reilly.
Thank you for watching...
And Bill O'Reilly was doing
Inside Edition.
He would fill in for Roger
every once in a while
and that's really how
they got to know each other.
But I think deep down inside
Roger wanted to be
in front of the camera.
In fact, at America's Talking,
he gave himself a show.
announcer: Straight Forward,
with Roger Ailes.
My staff told you
I didn't want the drag queens.
- Did they tell you that?
- It's cross-dressing.
It's been going on
since the Mona Leo.
I know, I'm-I'm,
for instance, a female.
You would never guess that.
- I've lived this long.
- That would be okay.
We'll be right back
with the first brother
Roger Clinton. Stay with us.
What's the matter with you?
Girls just wanna have fun
Yeah, yeah, yeah
Glenn Meehan: I think
Roger loved show business.
He just loved the spotlight.
You know,
he used to take tap dancing
back in those days
for exercise.
I think that's who
Roger really wanted to be.
Roger Ailes:
Right now, everybody thinks
I'm the greatest guy
in the world.
I'm sure
you've heard that a lot.
My doctor told me
I'm old, fat and ugly.
But none of those things
is gonna kill me immediately.
Everybody fears the unknown,
but I have a strong feeling
there's something bigger
than us.
E. Jean Carroll: Beth Tilson
was a CNBC executive
who was promoted
to help runAmerica's Talking.
Glenn Meehan: Before then,
it was always Roger and Judy,
Roger's assistant.
You almost said their two names
in the same breath always.
Then it was Beth and Roger.
E. Jean Carroll:
Beth was a cross
between Marilyn Monroe
and a schoolmarm,
and had eyes
for only one person
and that was Roger.
Oh, the wedding!
Beth had a white suit with fur,
very elegant.
Roger was in black.
Giuliani was the officiant.
And it was just me
and Barbara Walters.
And Geraldo was there.
And Roger, he was so happy.
Terry Anzur:
We reached the magic number
of 20 million subscribers.
And all of a sudden,
it wasn't Roger's little
playground anymore.
NBC went,
"Wow, this is a real channel
and we should be getting
more value out of it."
Glenn Meehan:
Now, the story goes
that Bill Gates
wanted a news network.
So he approached NBC
with his checkbook
and NBC said, "We've got
this network over in Fort Lee
calledAmerica's Talking.
It's yours."
female anchor #4:
A new partnership
between NBC and Microsoft
is heating up the media wars.
The two companies
have announced a new
24-hour, worldwide
cable TV news channel.
It is called MSNBC.
And NBC president Bob Wright
says he hopes to have it
up and running by summer.
Felycia Sugarman:
I got a phone call
from a friend of mine saying,
"Your friend Roger
threw a chair across the room
called the car and stormed out
of the building."
So I called Roger in his car
and I said,
"Hey, I heard something
went down. Are you okay?"
And he said,
"Felycia, I'm gonna fuck them.
I'm gonna fuck them like they
have never been fucked before."
And I knew something
would be born
out of this need for revenge.
Rupert Murdoch: Thank you
for your attendance
at such a short notice.
I'd just like to say
how delighted I am
that we've now reached
this moment
when we can firmly announce
uh, the starting
of a Fox News Channel.
Uh, we've been very lucky
in being able
to obtain the services
of Mr. Roger Ailes
who has had
such a fantastic success.
Uh, Mr. Ailes is here
and, uh, he might like to add
a few words,
but we'll be waiting
to take your questions.
Uh, it really is exciting
to join what I think
is, uh, the most dynamic,
uh, television company
in the world today.
Uh, and I've always admired
Mr. Murdoch's ability
to get things done.
It's a tough,
competitive world,
but, uh, we intend to be, uh,
when the music stops,
to have a chair.
female reporter #3:
The all-news game has become
a serious and a nasty business
as media mogul Rupert Murdoch
enters the 24-hour
news competition
with his Fox News Channel.
male #7:
CNN's Ted Turner insisted
he'd squish the Australian
tycoon like a bug.
Rupert had wanted
to launch something
like Fox News for years.
He loved taking on taboos
in his tabloids in London
and had always wanted
to puncture the establishment.
They wanted us to beat the crap
out of the other cable channels
at their own game.
And about ten weeks before Fox
actually went on the air,
Roger had all of us
in the company come to New York.
And he gave
this rip-roaring speech
about how the networks
had been around for so long
that they were antiquated.
And that we were gonna be
a pirate ship
that while everybody else
were these sort of battleships
and aircraft carriers that would
take a long time to turn around,
we were gonna be nimble,
we were gonna strike hard
and we were gonna have
a whale of a time doing it.
male #8 on TV: Good morning,
welcome to Fox News Channel.
So far, so good. We're on.
David Shuster:
Fox News was an absolute hoot
at the beginning.
Hi, I'm Bill O'Reilly.
Thank you for watching
on our very first day.
There were people
who had worked with Roger
atAmerica's Talking and CNBC,
and some people who worked
with him in a political sphere.
Welcome to Washington,
I'm Brit Hume...
And to all of us who started,
it was like
"Yes! This is great!"
Well, we're going to try
to be different
stimulating and a bit daring.
Loyalty was a theme
that came up every day
because all the people
around Roger would tell us
"You know,
Roger really likes loyalty.
Loyalty is really important
to Roger."
And people who would do
something nice for Roger
would often pop up on the air.
We did all sorts of segments
that didn't make
any sense to me.
They would say F-O-R,
Friend of Roger.
Joe Muto:
It was imparted to me
right from the very beginning
that it wasn't about journalism
it was about drawing
the biggest audience possible.
Uh, what do you got?
A library board
in Helena, Montana
voted unanimously
to keep the book
The Joy Of Gay Sex
on the library shelves.
Alright, that's good. Book that
for the D-block on, uh, Tuesday.
We used to call it
riling up the crazies.
That's what we were there to do.
We were there
to stir up outrage
because that's what
kept them watching.
female reporter #4: Whitewater
Independent Counsel Ken Starr
is reported to have
a number of audio tapes
on which a former White House
intern, Monica Lewinsky
told fellow staff
that she was sexually involved
with the president.
They must have fallen
on their knees at Fox
when the Lewinsky thing hit
and never stopped thanking God
for that blue dress
because Roger and Beth,
they despised the Clintons
and everything they stood for.
Roger Ailes: Bill Clinton
is very slick, very glib.
He has 15,000 press secretaries,
and it's clear she's not gonna
get the Betty Crocker Award.
I wouldn't stand
too close to her.
Could President Clinton
have had an affair
with an intern
and then try to cover it up?
Fox News correspondent
David Shuster has the story.
David Shuster:
Yesterday the White House
released a response
to Kenneth Starr's
detailed report to Congress.
David Shuster:
The Clinton scandal
was the rocket fuel
that got Fox News
into the stratosphere.
We were kicking
the networks' ass
on this story
day in and day out.
male reporter #2:
Fox News has learned it was
Linda Tripp who befriended...
And within two or three months,
it was
"Wow! Fox News
has something going."
Attorney General has now started
a 90-day preliminary...
...President of the United
States to testify under oath
that he did, in fact, have
sex...
male reporter #3:
Mr. Clinton is also accused
of obstruction of justice.
David Shuster: I remember it was
a huge celebration at Fox News
in New York,
and I was asked to come up
and meet with Roger Ailes
in his office.
This was after we got the
information about the cigars
and he says,
"What is this sex stuff?
What was really going on?"
And so I said, "Well, there
are some rumors about cigars
or something that was involved
in their sexual play."
And Roger loved it!
He was scintillated by it.
But the idea that Bill Clinton
would be sloppy,
allow an intern
to blab to her friend,
that's where that contempt came
because Roger Ailes did not
respect people who got caught.
"There's someone
in the room today
whose wings
are much bigger than mine.
His wings have a wide span
of generosity
that every day
lifts up so many people.
The one and only Roger Ailes."
I was beyond flattered
that Roger Ailes
was talking to me like this.
They feel a sense of relief...
Since 11 years old,
I wanted to be a news reporter.
I was working
at this little local TV station
and I got a meeting
with Roger Ailes.
So I went in there and sat at
the seat across from his desk.
He said,
"No, no, come over here."
And then he sat down on a couch
and he patted right next to him,
and he said,
"Come sit right next to me."
He said to me,
"You know, here at Fox News
in order to be beautiful,
it's not just waist up
it is the entire package.
People wanna see a woman
from, you know, head to toe."
And he looked me up and down
admiringly and said,
"You definitely are
beautiful enough to be here."
And I said, "Thank you."
And then he said,
"But I'm not a 100% sure."
He said,
"Stand up and twirl for me.
I-I wanna see everything."
And I-I just looked at him
and laughed.
And then a week later,
a friend of mine had dinner
with Roger Ailes at this
Italian restaurant, midtown,
and he said to me,
"Lidia, he's...
"I talked to him about you.
He... I said...
He-He wasn't, he's not serious
about bringing you on."
I said,
"Well, what do you mean?"
He said, "He, he asked
about you sexually.
He asked
what kind of girl you were."
And I said
you were a good girl.
But I think that it was,
in a way, a test.
I think I failed
because I didn't hear back.
An axis of evil standoff
as Fox reports tonight.
Hello, everyone,
I'm Alisyn Camerota.
If you wanted something...
I wanted more opportunity,
I wanted to try to anchor.
I think that he saw that
as "What do I get out of that?"
And so when I went to him
to ask him for more opportunity
he said,
"Well, I would have to work
with you more closely,
if that were to happen.
I would have to train you
give you sort of tutorials
and, you know,
people might be jealous.
And so we would have to...
It would be best
if we did it away from here.
Um, perhaps
at a hotel sometime.
Do you know what I'm saying?"
And I said, "Yeah, I think
I do know what you're saying."
I mean, I knew I was never going
to go meet Roger at a hotel.
That was unthinkable to me,
that was never going to happen.
But I didn't know
what was gonna happen next,
if I was gonna be
fired if I didn't do it.
I didn't know how he was gonna
make that happen.
I mean, Roger was the king.
His assistant
was the head of HR.
And so it didn't occur to me
that there was somebody
higher than Roger who could have
done something. There wasn't.
Alexis:
And weren't people at Fox News'
putting out
salacious online material?
There were many websites.
Um, I think one was called
The Hot Women Of Fox.
There were different websites
about different body parts.
There were websites
dedicated to feet.
Sarah Ellison:
They wanted people to think
of the network in that way.
They were using the women
who worked there
for a very specific purpose.
Um, and it was to be sexualized
for their viewers,
and, we learned later,
for the people in the building.
Alisyn Camerota: And so that
was the culture of the time
and there was nobody who was
willing to challenge it.
If Fox News is the house
that Roger built
with some help
from Rupert Murdoch,
look at this group here
on this stage with you.
Uh, w-why? Why'd you pick 'em?
Somebody, uh, once asked me
how I hire talent.
And there were...
I've made a list and it was...
There were 27 things
on the list, a secret list,
uh, which one day will come out
in a book I'm writing
about all you people.
This is the deal.
Um, all of us are veterans
uh, that we've worked
for other companies,
and most of those companies
are horror shows.
This company
is a little bit different
because they let you...
They don't micromanage.
And-And Roger Ailes hires people
with whom he has confidence,
and then he lets them go.
Chris: Alright, we have
to take a break here,
and we're gonna be back
and talk about the milestones
that changed Fox News
and changed our country.
Joe Muto:
It was October, 2004.
I came into work one evening,
I was working the evening shift
and I look around the newsroom
and every computer
in the newsroom
was on this website
thesmokinggun.com.
And my buddy is, he's like,
"Dude, you gotta,
you gotta read this shit."
male reporter #4:
It is an absolute bombshell
of an allegation.
female reporter #5:
The sexual harassment case
against popular
cable TV host, Bill O'Reilly.
male reporter #5:
One of his associate producers,
Andrea Mackris
alleges that
in one phone conversation
O'Reilly fantasized, "You would
basically be in the shower.
I would take
that little loofa thing
and kinda soap up your back."
I like the part
about you wanting to rub falafel
on that lady's boobs,
and, uh, the part about
how you love vibrators,
and the part about
how you believed it
when a prostitute told you
you had a big penis.
You said yesterday
this is one of the most
evil things
you've ever experienced.
Why so evil? Why do you think
she's doing this?
I have no clue, but my career
could be ruined
and I'm very well aware of that.
But I can't let people do this.
Sarah Ellison:
What was interesting about
that case with Andrea Mackris
is she was somebody
who had evidence.
Multiple recordings of what was
obviously sexual harassment
and also threats
and intimidation.
"If any woman
ever breathed a word
I'll make her pay so dearly
that she'll wish
she'd never been born.
I'll rake her through the mud,
bring up things in her life
and make her so miserable
that she'll be destroyed.
If you cross Fox News Channel,
it's not just me,
it's Roger Ailes
who will go after you.
Ailes operates
behind the scenes,
strategizes
and makes things happen
so that one day, bam!
The person gets
what's coming to them,
but never sees it coming."
Joe Muto:
It was apparent to everyone
that he was guilty.
But Bill O'Reilly
had the highest ratings.
He brought in the most money.
You know, he was kind of
the face of the network.
So Roger protected Bill.
You know, just like Roger
was Rupert Murdoch's cash cow,
Bill O'Reilly
was Roger Ailes' cash cow.
So he helped
smooth everything over.
You want the truth,
you hire Bo Dietl.
You want something else,
go hire Slime-O PI.
Find the truth. That's all I do
is find the truth.
John Cook:
Bo Dietl is a former NYPD cop
who became a regular
on Fox News.
He was the go-to guy
to defend stop-and-frisk
or argue that Trayvon Martin
deserved to die or whatever.
Where was he,
where was he when two officers
got killed in New York?
And he also had
this private eye business
where he worked for Roger
doing security and
investigations for Fox News.
Well, I'll say it right now,
I respected Roger Ailes
because the man did so much
for America
and for the people of Fox.
Bo Dietl: On the Mackris case,
we were assigned to follow her
and to gain any kind
of information we could
where it was detrimental
to the case.
Sarah Ellison:
They took the information
that Bo Dietl was digging up
and leaked it
to The New York Post,
which was owned
also by Rupert Murdoch.
Joe Muto:
They said Andrea Mackris
is a slut. She's a drunk.
She's trying to entrap
Bill O'Reilly.
Bo Dietl: This is gonna be
a message to people.
When you file
these frivolous lawsuits
and you think you're gonna get
people who are well-known
to give you money
for garbage like this
we're gonna investigate you.
We're gonna u-uncover things
that we've already
about your life
so you're wide open right now.
So beware, people.
That was the tactic, like,
smear her, put pressure on her.
And as it turns out, it worked.
They settled it.
She can't talk.
And he skated.
His ratings went up from there.
His salary went up from there.
Fox News was making
so much money, no one cared.
Fox and Friends
Good morning, everyone,
today is Thursday
September 20th,
I'm Gretchen Carlson.
Thanks so much for sharing
part of your day with us today.
Uh, so, Rupert,
what made you think
that this whole thing
would work?
I just had a hunch that,
you know
there was, uh, room
for another point of view
and, and another service.
Rupert Murdoch is a genius
in terms of media,
but, more importantly, what
he does is, he bets on people...
I don't think we ever had
a written business plan.
I think we talked through
what we were gonna do
and he backed it,
but really let me run it.
Now, if I'd screwed it up,
I'd be dead.
E. Jean Carroll: Roger and Beth
were extremely impressed
with Rupert Murdoch.
I remember one time
Beth called me after spending...
had dinner at Rupert's house
with Wendi.
She couldn't believe the table
and the table setting.
They were pulled into a class
and circle of people
who were way above them.
So they had
a lot of catching up to do...
...because Rupert
was really doing
what Roger
had pictured himself doing:
Conquering a new world.
So Rupert bought
The Wall Street Journal.
What's the name
of Roger's little newspaper?
Alexis: The Putnam County
News And Recorder.
Yeah, The Putnam County
News And Recorder.
There you go.
That says everything.
I was actually told about
the sale the night before.
And I... I think
the first thing I said was
"Has he seen this?"
Because it was a one-room
antiquated equipment,
little dinky thing.
At that time,
it was a very typical
sleepy, small-town
weekly newspaper
that reported on the school
board and the town board.
And Cold Spring itself
is 1900 people.
Alison Rooney:
There is definitely
an air of Americana about it.
It has that main street that's
leading down to the river
right across from West Point.
And the whole Cold Spring area
is steeped
in Revolutionary War history.
Michael Turton:
The community was shocked
that this media mogul
this, uh, political kingpin
would have any interest
in coming to Cold Spring
and buying
this little weekly newspaper.
And we thought, you know,
"Is he going to do
with this local paper
what he does at Fox News?"
Alison Rooney:
I think Roger and Beth
wanted to become
lord and lady of the manor
almost worshipped in the town.
Those institutional landholders
are the ones who we are trying
to support, keep that property
in those hands
and out of the hands
of developers.
Richard Shea:
The first time I met him
was in the, uh,
Haldane School cafeteria
after a meeting.
And the first impression
I had was
this guy is, you know, a bully.
He was convinced
we were gonna tell him
he couldn't cut trees down,
he couldn't keep his view.
So he got people riled up...
because he was
sort of a master at that.
It was surreal.
Ailes showed up
with his attorney.
And he was locked and loaded
and, you know,
ready to go out there
and do battle.
female #2: What are you doing
to the chair, sir?
And after we had the debate,
Ailes walks up to me, let me
know he owned the newspaper
let me know he owns the courier
across the county
and essentially said,
"Look, if I'm not happy
you're not gonna be happy."
It wasn't a big threat.
It was like, "Yeah, okay, fine.
You know,
you own a newspaper. Great."
In hindsight, that was
a little naive.
Michael Turton:
When Roger took over the paper,
it definitely
became a political tool.
We have a full plate
for you tonight
so we're gonna get right to it.
My name is Beth Ailes.
Alison Rooney:
They put forth candidates
for the village office,
the town office,
who had no background
in anything to do
with local government.
Richard Shea: They got a guy
to run against me
who was just, you know,
a regular working guy like me.
And they put a lot of money
into billboards
and prepping him for debates.
And Roger, he told me
he had never lost
any election campaign
he'd gotten involved with.
He'd...
You know, and he was gonna
see me out of office.
You know,
he came here with a mission
to change this town
from blue to red.
Listen to this one.
"Roger Ailes needs enemies
like a tank,
like a tank needs fuel."
How come? Why are you.. Why the,
why the, why the pugnacity?
Well, I would argue with that.
I don't need enemies.
I have plenty.
But if somebody, uh,
gets over the line
or challenges in, uh, some
incorrect way, I will respond.
E. Jean Carroll:
Roger saw himself as a general
and nothing brought more joy
to Roger than a battle.
Two minutes. Pass the word.
He was like John Wayne
leading the Green Berets
through Vietnam.
And if there was no battle,
he would create the battle,
which is what he did
with Fox News.
Dividing us...
between the conservatives
and the liberals.
- Come on!
- Let's go!
Alisyn Camerota: Roger thought
that we were in a war
against our way of life,
against evil.
And he was very moved
by stories of patriotism
and stories of heroes.
How is he?
Pretty bad, sir,
but still alive!
Alisyn Camerota:
He had hemophilia.
And he said, "I couldn't serve
in the military
and that's a big regret
of mine.
But I consider this
my... payment to the country.
And I consider this
my battle station.
And I'm not leaving
my battle station."
I'm afraid for our country
and for our children's futures.
It's just really a scary time
in history.
This is about the systematic
dismantling of this country.
People are fired up. They're
upset with the government.
Have I got that right?
Roger Ailes:
Americans love their families.
They love their flag.
They think schools
have gone off the edge
and killed American history.
I built Fox understanding
the pressures, worries
and aspirations
of average Americans.
...home of the brave
Roger Ailes:
I love these people.
Vivian:
This is Vivian in Cincinnati
and, uh, Roger Ailes,
we love you here.
Keep up the good work.
female TV viewer:
I want to thank Fox News
for bringing to light
issues that, uh, don't get
covered by the other networks.
male TV viewer: Mr. Ailes,
I'm missingFox And Friends
to see you this morning.
Don't do that.
We need all the viewers
we can get on Fox And Friends.
Turn me off immediately
and go to Fox And Friends.
E. Jean Carroll: Lots of people
are smarter than Roger Ailes.
Lots and lots. But nobody
was as canny as Roger.
He could read a person
very fast.
He could read a room very fast.
And, boy, did he get
the temperature of the country
uh, when nobody else did.
- That's nice, you see it?
- Oh, wow, that's great.
And his numbers
have been fantastic.
Felycia Sugarman:
Roger absolutely understood
from all the time in politics
that frightening people
pouring, you know,
gasoline on that fire,
that gets people
glued to their television.
Glenn Beck:
That was the genius of Roger
knowing how to speak
the language of America.
More blood. More red meat.
"I gotta get you outraged,
so you watch more."
- Caution.
- Listen up, America.
It is happening, America.
I am telling you,
America as we know it,
freedom of speech,
as we know it, is over.
The left has been preparing
and indoctrinating.
They're gonna take away
your constitutional rights.
They sneer at you.
They have contempt for you.
Who's gonna stop this madness?
You?
Are you paying attention now?
When you're watching Fox News,
you think
these people are just
kind of peddling these theories
because they want more viewers
and they're catering
to their base.
But based on my conversation
with Roger Ailes,
he truly believed in it.
Barack Obama has
deep, emotional ties to Islam.
Lidia Curanaj:
He said to me, "Barack Obama,
he's really not a Christian.
He's a Muslim.
His father is Muslim.
Well, he could deny it all he
wants, but he has an agenda."
Alexis:
What do you think that was?
To ruin, to ruin America.
To bring it down.
I mean, that's...
He-He felt like
the president at the time
was a threat.
And it was almost like his duty
as the head of Fox News
to get the truth out.
Bill O'Reilly:
Barack Obama's father
who abandoned his family
was a Muslim
who eventually turned atheist.
male reporter: Barack Obama
has dozens of unelected
and unaccountable czars working
to execute his radical plan.
Let's give
his new green jobs czar.
The guy is, again,
black liberation theology,
a black nationalist.
This is part of the movement
that is trying to get Islam
and specifically, Sharia law
infused into
the American legal court system.
This president, I think,
has exposed himself as a guy
over and over and over again
who has a deep-seeded hatred
for white people
or the white culture,
I don't know what it is.
David Shuster:
Roger Ailes paved the way
for conspiracy theories
to go mainstream.
The idea that Barack Obama's
not American
Pizzagate, whatever it is
there's no shame now
in promoting this stuff.
And in fact, the benefit is
you get airtime.
And if you get airtime,
you become more famous.
Donald Trump is back here
with us.
- Thank you.
- Great to have you.
You are a man of action.
Trump is such a Foxy character
that if he hadn't been real,
Roger Ailes would've created
him... in a lab.
Trump: He can say what he wants,
but the fact is
that this guy has not revealed
his birth certificate.
He just signs executive orders
all over the place,
then he'll be sued on that.
He'll be out on a golf course
in about three years
when it comes up.
Everything he touches
turns to trouble.
And I was gonna use
a worse word,
but I refuse to use that word.
Joe Muto: You know, Trump had
a personal relationship
with a lot of the people
at the network.
He was on every Fox show,
he was onO'Reilly,
Hannity, Fox And Friends.
He was everywhere.
Uh, Donald Trump, welcome back.
It's Monday, it's time for you.
Trump:
Good morning.
So Trump was a familiar voice
to the Fox News audience,
which I think
is what made him so palatable
you know,
during the Republican primary.
That was Roger's power
and influence.
John Cook:
Roger Ailes is one of
the most consequential figures
in our cultural history.
And at a time when
the news business as a whole
was, like, dying and flailing,
he created one
of the most profitable
news ventures ever.
Alisyn Camerota:
He figured out that there was
this right-leaning market
that hadn't been cornered.
It aligned
with his own world view.
And in a short order, Fox News
became the number one
cable network.
Our cable news competition
has been destroyed.
Ratings for liberal TV news
are dismal.
male reporter #6:
Fox News Channel remained
the top cable news channel...
Alisyn Camerota:
And then all of his assumptions
have been proven right.
female anchor #5:
Ailes has signed
a new multi-year contract
with the company.
I mean, he was winning.
He was winning.
I think when you look at
Roger Ailes in this community,
he tried to take it over,
but never really
became part of it.
And he may have been a genius
on the national scene,
but I think
he really did not get
what the local community was.
Roger Ailes: I moved up
to that quiet village,
but I had no idea there was
any intrigue up there.
I thought this was a normal,
nice community.
All of a sudden,
we find out, holy shit!
Reminds me of
the La Drang Valley in Vietnam.
Alison Rooney:
Working at the newspaper
with Roger and Beth,
it was always thinking
the worst of people,
always thinking that
someone was out to get them.
They relished
rousing and dividing.
And I just decided
I just can't take it anymore.
Got to get out.
A great number of people
in their staff left.
You know, it was sizable.
It was, you know, at least 50%.
And we all knew that they would
perceive it as an attack.
About three days
after I left there,
I began hearing from people
whom I had sent Facebook
messages to,
private Facebook messages
from my own account,
um, that... that they knew
that Roger Ailes
had looked at them.
And in one instance, the person
received a phone call
from Roger Ailes.
He picked up he said,
"This is Roger Ailes.
I hear that you've been making,
uh, threats about me."
And he quoted whatever
innocuous throwaway line.
He quoted verbatim
from my personal accounts.
All password protected,
signed into by me.
And it was
absolutely terrifying.
This feeling that there are
really powerful people
who live five minutes
from my door
who are out to destroy me
and my little life.
But I was just the copy editor.
Like, why does he care?
Richard Shea:
You know, during the election,
it got so ugly.
I remember at one point,
he said,
"I'll park a goddamn
Fox News truck
at the end of your driveway
and have them follow you
as long as I want."
And that's not the kind of thing
that you're expecting
in small-town politics.
You know, they put our house
on the front page
ofThe Putnam County News.
And, you know, I was getting
letters about abortion.
Then one guy told me
point-blank one time,
"If I ever see you cross
the street, I'll run you over."
And I was like,
"Man, this is nuts."
But in the end,
the election wasn't close.
Not within 50%.
We're here
at Makaria Gallagher's house
celebrating a Democratic sweep.
The opposition's here. We've all
shook hands and made up.
So we're looking forward
to working for the town
and, you know, getting things
back to normal.
After winning the election,
we spent many,
many hours together.
He'd call me on
a lot of Fridays.
"Come on down.
I wanna talk to you."
You know, Friday afternoon.
It would be about local issues
and then it would
just morph into him
telling me about himself.
Trying to impress me.
He would always tell me
how much money he made.
You know, he just made a billion
dollars last year for Fox.
It was sad in a way.
I'm thinking
"Here's a guy,
all the money in the world,
could be anywhere,
be doing anything,
and we're sitting
in the offices
of The Putnam County News
having a chat.
I always wondered, "Does
this guy have actual friends?"
You know, "Don't you have
somewhere you'd rather be?"
He would come right out and say,
"Why do people hate me
so much here?"
Roger Ailes:
Keep your eyes on other people.
Watch what's going on.
Are they agreeing with you
or disagreeing?
I was told, my first week
on the job,
"Roger has this place bugged.
He's got the newsroom bugged.
He's got the elevators bugged.
He's got
all the talent offices bugged.
Don't talk shit about Roger.
Don't talk about, you know,
how much you love
Hillary Clinton
because they'll fire you if they
hear you talking like that."
Glenn Beck:
At one point, he called me
into his office and he said,
"You know, a lot of people
doing their homework on you."
I said, "I know."
And he said,
"So you have to be careful."
And I said, "Hmm, I know."
And he said,
"Look, there's a lot of stuff
out there."
And he reaches down and he pulls
up a stack of file folders
about this tall, literally.
He sits it right in front of him
and he just puts his hand
on there.
And he said... He sits there
and he looks at me for a while
and he said,
"It's always a shame
when a man has a wife
as wonderful as yours."
I was like, Oh, my gosh.
And I leaned up out of my chair
towards his desk
and I said, "Yes?"
And he said,
"It's always a shame
when a man does something
to hurt that woman."
And I said, "It is,
and that's why I'm happy to say
nothing like that has happened."
And he stared at me
for about 30 seconds
and he put the files down,
and he said,
"But I just want you
to be careful."
He was fishing for something.
He was bluffing.
I think there was nothing
in those files.
That was Roger's way
of having control of people.
First thing I tell people at Fox
is, if you're not happy here
and you're not havin' fun here,
you need to get out of here
because we don't wanna be
around downers.
Negative people make
positive people physically ill.
All progress
depends on positive people.
Get away from the other ones.
They're gonna drag you down.
I was offered, um,
on three occasions
to go and work at Fox
and I turned them all down.
I think Roger
was a different person then.
And it wasn't a place
that I wanted to work.
And it's sad to me that
he went on to do what he did.
I think he probably
would have been happier
if America's Talkingcontinued.
Felycia Sugarman:
When I went up to visit him at
Fox, he seemed happy to see me.
I mean, he was married.
He had a son.
He talked a lot about his son,
Zach, when I saw him.
But I remember thinking
it was a little bit odd
because he had
the bulletproof glass,
the cameras that were feeding
into his office.
There was a steel
or some kind of reinforced door.
And he said that he's, you know,
had to protect himself
against the Libyans
or something.
Adasa Blanco:
Mr. Ailes wasn't favorable
towards people
of Middle-Eastern descent.
He kinda had these
preconceived ideas of them.
And there was one incident,
a horrible incident
that a coworker of mine, Musfik
he had to bring something
to the second floor
and wound up in Mr. Ailes area,
and all hell broke loose.
Next thing you know,
there was a wall built
so you had to go through a door
to get into his area.
And Musfik was upset.
He was in tears.
They revoked his access,
not to Mr. Ailes' area,
but to the second floor
entirely.
John Cook: Roger Ailes was
a profoundly paranoid person.
He carried a gun at all times.
He was convinced that Al-Qaeda
was trying to kill him,
that gay terrorists
would come attack him.
Um, Roger Ailes thought
that like
Osama Bin Laden was sitting
in his cave
and he had, like,
the list of people.
And it was like,
George W. Bush,
and then Roger Ailes.
He thought that he was
a world historical figure
worthy of
an assassination attempt.
Alisyn Camerota:
At the White House
Christmas party
I was directly behind Roger
in line to have our photos taken
with the president.
So I peeked around the curtain
and I watched
as Roger Ailes approached
and Barack Obama turned around
and held his arms out,
and saw Roger for the first time
and said,
"Roger Ailes,
the most powerful man in media,
step right up."
And Roger went up
and shook his hand
and they stood
and smiled for the camera
and took the shot.
I didn't know if they were
gonna insult each other
or, like, come to blows
because it had been so tense
for so long.
And so when we got back
the next day, I was back at Fox
and I ran into one of the
senior vice presidents who said,
"Did you have fun
at the Christmas party?"
I said, "I had a great time.
It was fascinating
because I was right behind Roger
for the photo taking,"
He said, "Oh, then you heard
the big moment?"
And I said, "Yes, I did."
And he said, "Wasn't it crazy
to hear President Obama say,
'Roger Ailes, the most
powerful man in the world'?"
And I said,
"That's not what he said."
And he said, "Yes, it is."
And I said, "Uh-uh."
He said, "Roger Ailes,
the most powerful man in media."
But there was no point
in me going to, like, burst
Roger's bubble
or call bullshit on it with him
you know, one-on-one,
because I saw that
that was already
the new narrative.
Sarah Ellison:
Roger was definitely invested
in creating a myth
about who he was
and what he had come from.
And it was a myth
about overcoming adversity.
It was a myth about success.
It was a myth about power.
For example, the story of Roger
jumping to his father
and then being allowed
to fall flat on the ground
is such a well-known
literary trope.
The story of how
a father teaches his son
the hard lessons of life.
It's been used in literature
many, many times.
And the story happens
in the bedroom
he shares with his brother.
His brother denies
that that story is true.
But I think
it's Roger's effort to create
a kind of trust-no-one
victim narrative
that really fueled him,
and Roger really knew
how to manipulate that.
Glenn Beck:
It's hard when you actually
believe in something
and you,
you don't want to do harm,
but somehow or another,
you just keep doing harm.
announcer: Ladies and gentlemen,
Glenn Beck!
Hello, America!
I remember
when I was in Washington D.C.
It was after the big thing
on the mall.
And I remember
praying and hearing
"You're standing
in the wrong place."
We are truly humbled..
How am I now in this position
where I am the most polarizing
divisive figure in the country?
And it was the beginning
of give it all up.
Get out, get out,
get out, get out.
So I went into Roger's office
and I said, "I'm leaving."
And he said, "No, you're not.
Nobody leaves."
And I said, "Yeah, you know
what, before you say anything...
can I just say something
'cause I know
how this is gonna end here?
So just let me say this to you.
No matter what, thank you."
I said, "Thank you
for giving the conservatives
a chance to have a voice."
And I... And he looked at me
and his eyes welled up.
And that meant something to him
that somebody actually saw it
that way.
I said to Roger,
"So what are you,
what's next for you?"
I said,
"Why are you still here?"
And he said, "Still have a,
still have a president to pick."
"I still have a president
to pick."
Wow.
Roger Ailes:
We're in a storm.
Our mast is broken,
our compass is off
and there's a big damn hole
in the boat.
We've allowed ourselves
to be manipulated by others.
Is everything fair game today?
Is everything personal?
A sexual harassment scandal is
rocking the world of cable news.
Gretchen Carlson,
who until recently
was an anchor for Fox News
is suing the channel's
powerful CEO, Roger Ailes.
She accuses him of firing her
for refusing
his sexual advances.
Gretchen Carlson
was a former Miss America.
female announcer:
She's crying, that's obligatory.
Sarah Ellison:
She was a violin prodigy
and had used those talents
to get her
a Miss America crown.
But she also
had a kind of hard edge
and she was sophisticated
even though when she was on air
onFox And Friends,
she sort of played dumb.
We're not supposed to wear
the same color and I'm just..
- Just one of those mornings.
- No kiddin'.
But she certainly
went into this prepared.
She had been recording
conversations with Roger
long before
her contract wasn't renewed.
female anchor:
She accused him
of ogling her in his office
and asking her to turn around
so he could view her posterior
claiming Ailes told her:
Sarah Ellison: There is a way
to operate in a crisis.
And there are
a group of professionals
who know how to do that.
When Roger is being accused
of sexual harassment
and needs to know
who he should hire
and who he should go to
for advice
who does he call
but Donald Trump?
Let me check your mic.
We operate in a very small space
called Crisis Communications,
but with clients that find
themselves, we always say
in difficult
or delicate situations.
So we get a lot of our work
through attorneys.
Karen Kessler: The day after
Gretchen's lawsuit was filed
I was on my way home
from the gym,
and it was about 7:30
in the morning,
and the phone rang,
and it was an attorney
that is a well-known litigator.
He said, "I work with
Donald Trump a great deal.
"Donald Trump
is looking to find someone
who can help his friend,
Roger Ailes."
And at that point,
we did not know
much about Roger's history
with women,
and we walked in with the belief
that this was a legal case
and that they were gonna be
fighting it on the legal merits.
We pulled in
and we were greeted by a woman
who introduced herself
as Beth Ailes' sister.
And she took us
into the living room,
which was very heavy chintz:
florals, sofas.
And seated against the windows
in this huge armchair
was Roger himself,
larger than life
hooked up
to an intravenous... bag
uh, attached to one of those
long, those high metal stands.
And Beth said,
"Roger is getting his vitamins."
There was this whirlwind going
on around him and about him.
It was just this frenetic kind
of energy war room-like,
of phones ringing
people walking in and out.
You know, "I just heard
from Alan Dershowitz."
"Oh, that's so-and-so's
weighing in."
"I need to get on the phone.
Rudy Giuliani just called me."
Everybody was a guardian
at the gate
to protect Roger.
And I...
He really responded
I think, very well to that.
Which is one of the reasons
why it offended him
that Gretchen Carlson
had, uh, had sued him.
"This no-good, just sort
of a talentless reporter."
He said that really the lawsuit
wasn't about the money.
It was about getting attention.
And that she was desperate
to be on television.
And without being on television,
she had no reason to live.
And I said, "You know,
in the end, all these cases
usually settle because it's not
worth the negative publicity
and it's not worth
the career impact."
And when I said that, Beth Ailes
jumped out of her chair
furious, and she said,
with this look in her eyes,
"We will never ever
settle this case."
And she looked at us and said,
"You need
to understand something.
Roger is more important
than America."
I looked at Warren
and I looked at his pad
'cause Warren was taking notes,
and Warren said,
"I'm writing it down. Roger is
more important than America."
Shepard Smith:
Fox News chairman, Roger Ailes,
is responding
to a lawsuit filed by lawyers
for Gretchen Carlson
calling her accusations or
allegations false and offensive.
They said all statements will
be run through Irena Briganti,
the head of public relations
for Fox,
who he told us
was a stone killer.
And she was intensely focused
on getting
as many of the highest profile
and frankly,
best-looking women on Fox
to say that indeed
he was not a harasser.
And Irena was really proud
that in one day
she had been able to enlist
22 people to say--
- "We're up to 22."
- Right.
"We're up to 22, Roger."
female ABC anchor:
Several female Fox anchors
are coming to his defense
including Maria Bartiromo
who says:
Donald Trump:
It's very sad because
he's a very good person.
And I can tell you that some
of the women complaining
I-I know how much
he's helped them.
Sarah Ellison:
Beth called Kimberly Guilfoyle
who was one of the anchors
at something like 6:30
in the morning
the day
after the suit was filed.
The idea was to get Kimberly
to read a statement
of support on air
while a group of Fox News women
walked in behind her and formed
a sort of semi-circle behind her
as a show of support for him.
Karen Kessler:
They had a whole strategy,
and the more we pushed back
Irena would say things like,
"Stand down!"
So here's the deal. If somebody
is paying you a wage,
you owe that person
or company allegiance.
If you don't like what's
happening in the workplace,
go to Human Resources or leave.
But don't run down the concern
that supports you
by trying to undermine it.
Factor tip of the day,
loyalty is good.
reporter:
Mr. Ailes...
male CNN anchor:
Fox is Ailes' fiefdom.
But even he has a boss,
three bosses actually.
Rupert Murdoch
and his two sons.
And the Murdochs
are now involved.
Sarah Ellison:
Rupert had always
protected Roger.
But this time it was different
because Rupert's sons
James and Lachlan Murdoch,
who had never liked Roger,
Roger never liked them,
had decided to hire
an outside law firm
to investigate the claims
against Roger.
Karen Kessler:
He was so dismissive.
He really believed that as
annoying as these two kids were
you know,
he could flick them off.
And that's really why
he had to defend this lawsuit
so that they didn't use this
as the weapon
that they were looking for.
He told us
that most of the talent at Fox
had in their contract
that they had the right to walk
if anything were to happen
to him
and he were to have to leave.
And so he was really intent
on showing
that almost every notable name
on Fox was gonna leave with him.
Who with any kind
of fiduciary responsibility
allows that to happen?
That if the CEO leaves,
everyone else can leave?
All the key players can leave
and destroy the network?
Wow. That's... Wow!
I think that there was a part
of Roger
that wanted to be remembered
as the guy who built Fox
and as soon as he left,
the whole thing fell apart.
"Bill O'Reilly's gonna leave
if I leave.
Greta Van Susteren's gonna leave
if I leave.
Jeanine.."
He went through the whole list.
But when are we gonna
get Megyn?
When are we... Right.
What's with Megyn?
And Irena said, "We'll have
to discuss that offline."
- Right.
- And Beth was livid.
Livid that the answer
wasn't an immediate yes.
female NBC anchor:
Now, another Fox News anchor
Megyn Kelly,
has entered the controversy.
female anchor #7:
Kelly told investigators
Ailes harassed her
when she was a young
correspondent in Washington.
It was explicit,
quid pro quo sexual harassment
which was, you know,
"Basically, you sleep with me
and I'll give you a promotion."
Uh, but I had
to shove him off of me.
And he came back
and I shoved him again.
And he came back a third time.
When I shoved him off
the third time,
he asked me
when my contract was up.
Congratulations, Roger,
you've finally achieved
your ultimate fantasy.
Getting fucked
by two gorgeous employees
at the same time.
Sarah Ellison:
Gretchen had started
a hashtag Stand With Gretchen.
And more accusations
kept coming out.
female anchor #8:
Half a dozen additional women
claiming the Fox News chairman
sexually harassed them
years ago.
Sarah Ellison:
And the dam broke.
People who had been
afraid of him for decades
finally felt a little bit
more emboldened
to actually talk about him.
Marsha Callahan:
When Gretchen came forward
I said, "I have to support
this woman.
I have to let her know...
that this has happened
for 50 years with this man.
And I'm a little nobody,
but I... it happened to me
and I want you to know that."
I was just beginning to model
and I got a call
fromThe Mike Douglas Show
that they wanted me
to come down and audition.
And then I had a call
from Roger Ailes himself
telling me that he wanted me
to wear a garter belt
and stockings and high heels.
And I thought
it was a little odd,
but I was new in this career
so I put them on
and went to the audition.
And when I got there,
he took me in his office
closed the door and he said,
"I want you
to show me your legs."
And I said, "Well,
w-why would you want me to...
why would you want me
to do that?"
And he said, "No, no, no.
If your legs look good
in the stockings
and a garter belt
I know you have great legs."
Then he asked me to sit
on the sofa, pull my skirt up,
stand in different poses,
pull my skirt up,
while he was taking
Polaroids of me.
And then he said that
he would put me on the show,
but I had to go to bed with him.
And I just said kind of off-hand
"Yeah, right, you and who else?"
And he just said, "Just me
and a few
of my preferred friends."
He was treating me
like I was a whore.
That's how I felt.
And at that point, I just said
"No. No. I-I-I can't do that."
And he said, "No, pretty girls
like you are a dime a dozen."
And that's when I ended
the interview and left.
And it never entered my head
to tell anybody
until I h-heard about Gretchen.
My son said to me, "Mom...
be brave.
Thank you for standing up
for all the women...
that go through this."
That just really
touched me that...
that he was proud
that I was doing it.
I think the twist
in the knife for Roger
is when he realizes
that Rupert isn't behind him
and that he is gonna have to go.
But there's still
muscle memory for Roger
so he's still showing up
for work.
So he's on his way
to the office
and his driver gets a call
from the head of security.
He says, "Please drive him
around the block a few times."
So there's this absurd scene
where his driver
drives him around
and then gets word that he's
been locked out of the building.
It's such as ignominious end
to not even be able to come in
and collect your things
from the place
that you've created.
They took him out
like a drone strike.
They just wanted
to remove him from the equation.
Richard Shea:
Once there was that cascade
of allegations
and once Rupert Murdoch
obviously made the decision
to fire him, that was it.
You didn't see him anymore.
They were gone. They were done.
I don't think he wanted to show
his face around town which is...
He must have cared about
his reputation, obviously
and it was..
That sort of thing
is not good for your reputation.
I will admit, too, as woman
after woman came forward,
although I felt sorry
for the women,
at the same time,
I was like, "He's done."
It finally happened,
he's done.
And I was happy that
it happened while he was alive.
female anchor #9:
Fox settled with Carlson
agreeing to pay her
a staggering 20 million...
Karen Kessler:
Three weeks later,
Gretchen got her settlement,
and 14 more women came forward
and said, "What about me?
I've got a story
that's not very different."
And it wasn't just confined
to Roger Ailes.
"A sex-fueled
Playboy Mansion-like cult."
That's how former hosts
describe the Fox News Channel.
We were abused. We were...
Our careers w-were destroyed
and our lives were destroyed.
female anchor #10:
The case gets uglier
and uglier by the day.
female anchor #11:
Six more women now claim
Ailes sexually harassed them.
female anchor #12:
In shocking accounts
reported byNew York Magazine,
half a dozen additional women
claiming the...
Laura Luhn: I didn't realize
the extent to which
Roger really was..
a predator.
He would have me
get down on my knees
and tell me,
"You know what you are, Laura?
You're my whore,
you're my sex slave."
On Fox News, Megyn Kelly
has a new book coming out.
- Have you read it?
- No. Have not read it, though--
- You're in it.
- Um..
Yeah, I'm not that interested
in this, okay?
I'm not interested in making
my network look bad at all.
That doesn't interest me
one bit.
Nobody could have predicted how
fast the house of cards fell.
all: Fire Bill O'Reilly.
Fire Bill O'Reilly.
female anchor #13:
Bill O'Reilly settled
a sexual harassment claim to
the tune of 32 million dollars.
Thirty-two million dollars,
which is around the same amount
O.J. Simpson had to pay
the Goldman family
in a civil lawsuit
for murdering two people.
Alisyn Camerota:
Little did we know
it'd have this cascading effect,
and that in the space
of one year,
Roger would be ousted,
that Bill O'Reilly
would be ousted.
This was a hit job, a political
and financial hit job
to bring down Fox News and me.
Alexis: So does that mean
things have changed at Fox?
I don't know.
I don't know.
How harmful has
the whole raft of allegations
about sexual harassment at
Fox News been for the business?
Tamara Holder:
I think Rupert Murdoch
is a disgusting human being.
He allowed so many abuses
to take place.
And when Rupert
went on television and said
that what was going on
at Fox News
was flirting, nonsense,
only Roger Ailes,
I knew that I had to respond.
Hundreds of millions of dollars
has gone to settling cases
with women
over and over and over again,
and we've been told
that we have to shut up.
- True.
- We just wanted to work.
That's all we've ever
wanted to do was work.
That is not nonsense.
This is people's lives.
There have been
plenty of settlements
that none of us know about
and women
who've disappeared from there
because they're afraid
to say anything publicly.
That's how big this was.
As more and more stories have
come forth since Roger Ailes
you begin to realize
that people like Roger Ailes
can't get away
with all this stuff,
if there aren't a circle
of people around them
that make them look better
than they are,
that protect them legally,
that schedule those meetings,
that get rid of people that
are problems, and that's not us.
And that's why
this is the first time publicly
we've really spoken about it
at all.
We really don't talk
about our clients,
and our clients
expect us not to.
But in this case, not only
did we not have a contract,
not only did we not have an NDA,
not only did we not have any
legal reasons why we couldn't--
- Or get paid.
- Or get paid,
but it's wrong. It's so wrong.
And I can't be part of that.
Not only am I not
gonna be a part of that,
I'm gonna expose it
so that these men one day
can get some of what
they really deserve,
which is that there's justice
for their victims.
David Shuster:
Roger died within a year
of leaving Fox News.
Because Fox News was
such a big part of Roger Ailes
that when it all fell apart
there was nothing left
for Roger.
That's who he was.
He was...
chairman of Fox.
Our former CEO and chairman,
husband to Beth, father of Zach
fell at his home in Florida
and did not survive.
Roger Ailes was a patriot.
He was the biggest personality
and the most influential
and powerful man
I ever personally encountered.
I loved him.
Roger gave
every single one of us
on this couch an opportunity.
He put food on our table,
and, you know,
he went out in such a sad way.
But who doesn't have sins?
He will be missed on this
channel. He will be missed.
Alisyn Camerota:
There's no denying,
he was a powerful
influential person
who changed the country.
Glenn Meehan:
Roger knew what fear could do.
Roger knew
what paranoia could do
uh, to the audience.
You know, they kept comin' back.
Felycia Sugarman:
The big disappointment was that
he used his talent
and his media savvy
to build something
that drove a wedge.
That's, to me,
that's pretty devastating.
Alisyn Camerota:
I thought that things
would be more different
after he was gone.
But he casts such a long shadow
that his vision
can actually go on without him.
Brian Kilmeade:
Now, there is a report
out there, guys
that the president
of the United States
watches us at 7 a.m.
Eastern Time.
So let's take a look
at the White House right now.
If-if the president of the
United States is actually
watching, blink the lights
on and off, okay?
- Oh, my goodness!
- That's awesome.
Where
Do we go from here?
Where
Do we go from here?
Baby
I know you love me
Make me stronger
Don't make me weaker
Give me that candy
Play with my mind
You're bringin' me down
And not makin' me strong
I know that you want
Baby
And I won't be too long
Where
Do we go from here?
Oh
Where
Do we go from here?
Oh
Gotta make that change
We gotta
all make that change
My brothers and my sisters
It's time to make this world
A brighter place
For the generation to come
Can find love and peace
What we left them
So I'm gonna tell you
over and over again
Brothers, sisters
Listen to me
From the heart
Come on
Oh
Come on
Ah
Ooh
Oh where?