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Fox News Continued To See Audience Growth In May While MSNBC And CNN Posted Double-Digit Declines Vs. 2024

Fox News Continued To See Audience Growth In May While MSNBC And CNN Posted Double-Digit Declines Vs. 2024

Yahooa day ago

Fox News continued to show robust ratings growth for the month of May, again dominating its cable news rivals MSNBC and CNN, which have seen year-over-year declines.
The past month saw the debut of MSNBC's new nighttime lineup, with The Weeknight taking the 7 p.m. ET slot, Rachel Maddow returning to one night a week at 9 p.m. ET and Jen Psaki filling that time period Tuesday to Thursday.
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But the new shows are not reversing the trendlines vs. 2024. While MSNBC has recovered some audience since a post-election fall off, the network, like CNN, has seen double-digit drops from a year ago. The caveat is that last year was a presidential election year, when networks typically see an increase in viewership.
In primetime, Fox News averaged 2.46 million viewers, up 23%, while MSNBC posted 877,000, down 24%, and CNN averaged 426,000, down 18%. In the 25-54 demo, Fox News averaged 262,000, up 32%, compared to CNN with 76,000, down 21%, and MSNBC with 73,000, down 34%.
In total day, Fox News averaged 1.56 million viewers, up 21%, compared to MSNBC with 545,000, down 33%, and CNN with 353,000, down 24%. In the 25-54 demo, Fox News averaged 180,000, up 22%, while CNN posted 59,000, down 27%, and MSNBC averaged 49,000, down 41%.
The Rachel Maddow Show was MSNBC's top rated show, averaging 1.89 million viewers, while The Briefing with Jen Psaki averaged 950,000, according to Nielsen figures of the four weeks through May 23. The latter is down from the previous occupant of the Tuesday-Friday time slot, Alex Wagner Tonight, which averaged 1.3 million viewers of its run from 2022 to 2025. Psaki's show did improve on its lead in, All In with Chris Hayes, which averaged 912,000.
The Weeknight, featuring hosts Symone Sanders Townsend, Michael Steele and Alicia Menendez, averaged 772,000 total viewers. In its final month in February, Joy Reid's ReidOut averaged 955,000.
Fox News' The Five was the most viewed cable news show of the month, drawing an average of 3.77 million viewers, followed by Jesse Watters Primetime with 3.23 million, Gutfeld! with 2.92 million, Special Report with 2.81 million and Hannity with 2.73 million. In the 25-54 demo, The Five averaged 368,000, followed by Jesse Watters Primetime with 363,000, Gutfeld! with 328,000, Hannity with 299,000 and The Ingraham Angle with 297,000.
The figures are from Nielsen via Fox News.
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This ‘Sex and the City' dress achieved cult status. But it has controversial origins
This ‘Sex and the City' dress achieved cult status. But it has controversial origins

CNN

time10 minutes ago

  • CNN

This ‘Sex and the City' dress achieved cult status. But it has controversial origins

Remember when Carrie Bradshaw of 'Sex and the City' wore a Christian Dior newspaper-print dress? Bradshaw, the fashion-forward sex columnist, played by Sarah Jessica Parker in the television series, defined late 1990s and early 2000s lifestyle aspirations for Gen X women when she and her three friends dominated the small screen from 1998 to 2004. (The television series and sequel aired on HBO and Max, respectively, which share the same parent company as CNN: Warner Bros. Discovery.) Cut on the bias and featuring a newspaper print, the now iconic outfit designed by John Galliano became a piece of fashion legend, courtesy of a scene from season three, episode 17, which saw Bradshaw wearing it while walking in slow motion through the traffic-lined streets of Manhattan. In those brief on-screen moments, the dress — which was from Dior's ready-to-wear autumn-winter 2000 'Fly Girl' collection — assured cult status. In January 2000, Galliano had already been at the helm of Christian Dior for four years, during which he injected the storied French fashion house with an exciting new energy. The British designer had become known for his fantastical collections and elaborate, narrative-driven runway shows. That year, he showed Dior's spring-summer haute couture collection at the Palace of Versailles, the former residence of the French royal family. Against this decadent backdrop, he sent models down the runway in dresses, jackets and pants made to look stretched, slashed and distressed, accessorized with what looked like garbage found on the street — miniature whiskey bottles, for example, and discarded kitchen utensils. Some models were draped in what appeared to be layers of newspapers reimagined as voluminous pants or peeping through sheer slip dresses. The collection, titled 'Hobo,' was inspired both by the displaced people the designer saw while jogging and by the 'Tramp Ball' trend from the 1920s and 30s whereby the wealthy dressed as the homeless for glamorous soirees. In this couture collection, the newspaper print was taken from the fashion pages of the International Herald Tribune. While the fashion press was complimentary of the collection in reviews, controversy soon ensued. Social welfare advocates and French critics were appalled. Was Galliano making a statement on class and privilege with this collection, or mocking the homeless? The homeless community staged protests outside Dior's headquarters in Paris' swanky 8th arrondissement. The opprobrium caused Galliano to release an official apology ten days after the collection debuted, stating, 'I never wanted to make a spectacle of misery.' Nevertheless, at Dior's autumn-winter 2000 ready-to-wear show, newspaper print again made its way into the collection, entitled 'Fly Girl.' However, this time Galliano created the fictional 'Christian Dior Daily' newspaper for the show and the design — inspired by Elsa Schiaparelli's 1935 newsprint pattern — which was seen on the runway printed on chiffon, leather, the lining of coats and on dresses. The garment that Parker would later wear was modeled in the fashion show by Angie Schmidt. In a 'Sex and the City' episode titled 'What Goes Around Comes Around,' which aired in October 2000, Parker's character wore the piece with her signature gold nameplate necklace, black lace Manolo Blahnik heels and a Fendi baguette bag — a vision of the modern New York woman whose glamour outpaced her practicality. While the dress had a controversial 'hobo chic' beginning, on Bradshaw it became emblematic of a new type of heroine — imperfect, neurotic, complicated, messy yet relatable. Twenty-five years on, the cowl-neck slip dress continues to fascinate. At the May premiere of Jenna Ortega's latest film 'Hurry Up Tomorrow,' the actor made headlines after she arrived onto the red carpet wearing the archival gown. Ortega took a few cues from Parker's on-screen version (she donned a similar gold pendant necklace and smoky eye makeup) but finished the look with a gold slingback heel. Following its runway debut, the dress went into production. Today, when it shows up on the secondary market or at auctions, it is considered a fashion holy grail, selling for many times its estimate. In December 2024, two identical versions of the historic dress happened to go to auction that same month — the first was at Kerry Taylor Auctions in London, and the second at auction house Sotheby's in New York. In both instances, the dress far exceeded its estimated selling price. In London, it fetched £55,000 ($69,000) — nearly tripling its estimate. And in New York, it more than doubled the expected price, selling for $54,000. In an email, Sotheby's told CNN that it acquired the coveted dress from a private collector who purchased it new when the 'Fly Girl' collection was first released nearly 25 years ago. 'It is by John Galliano at his peak during the Dior years. This fact alone makes it a desirable vintage collector's item,' said Lucy Bishop, who oversaw Sotheby's 'Fashion Icons' sale. Galliano later repurposed the print as 'the Galliano Gazette' for his namesake label and has since released several commercial collections featuring the famed motif. None have captured the zeitgeist quite like the original, even though celebrities including Rita Ora have worn an iteration of it. Galliano was fired from Dior in 2011 for a public antisemitic tirade and ousted from his namesake brand a month later. (He later apologized for his behavior.) But his fashion legacy still inspires. More recently, designer Demna (who only goes by his first name) gave his take on newsprint for Balenciaga's spring-summer 2018 collection, covering cardigans and shirts in the motif as a reaction to 'fake news' made famous by Donald Trump's tweets. Newspapers, once only a platform to distribute daily happenings, are continuing to inspire, only in a different guise. With nostalgia for 2000s fashion continuing to rise, the popularity of the design has made its way to mainstream fashion brands, with the likes of Réalisation Par, Shein and Zara all releasing their own versions of the print. So enduring is the style that Bradshaw actually wore the dress again in 2010's 'Sex and the City 2' movie. With the third season of SATC reboot 'And Just Like That…' released this week, whether she'll dig it back out of her closet remains to be seen.

This stunning Spelling Bee winner photo sums it all up
This stunning Spelling Bee winner photo sums it all up

Yahoo

time31 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

This stunning Spelling Bee winner photo sums it all up

The 100th Scripps National Spelling Bee is over, and we have a winner who overcame a rough late-bee error to win it all. Faizan Zaki, a 13-year-old from Allen, Texas, finished as a runner-up last year and was one of the three spellers left on Thursday when he was given "commelina." He immediately started spelling it wrong and told head judge Mary Brooks to ring the bell for an incorrect answer. You can see that moment below, but he got through to spell the final word correct: éclaircissement, which he nailed right away without asking for language origin or to be used in a sentence. BEST SPELLING BEE MOMENTS OF ALL TIME: The result? A win and his reaction was simply the best: No, it wasn't kamaaina, but a Mogollon (Shourav Dasari reference in 2015) attempt gone wrong for Faizan Zaki when he tried to spell "commelina" because he said "kam-" but then he realized he couldn't edit his answer 🙃 #spellingbee (R18)Mogolloned Cupar a round after 🫠 — ruletheword335 // TS 🐝 (@ruletheword335) May 30, 2025 You have to love it. He fell right to the ground in pure elation. And why did he spell words quickly? Per the Associated Press: Faizan had a more nuanced explanation: After not preparing for the spell-off last year, he overcorrected, emphasizing speed during his study sessions. Congrats to Faizan, who needed four tries to get the victory. Here he is talking about his preparation, in which he talked to CNN about how he focused on the vocabulary and the spell-off at the end: One of this year's Spelling Bee favorites, Faizan Zaki, showing off his fashion knowledge on @CNN. 🐝 — Kenneth Cole (@kennethcole) May 29, 2025 What a win! And we'll leave it off with the photo of Zaki collapsed on stage, which sums it all up: Awesome. This article originally appeared on For The Win: National Spelling Bee winner photo of Faizan Zaki sums up his run

WATCH: US intel's take on TdA gang misses mark on ties to Maduro regime, ex-Venezuela army officer says
WATCH: US intel's take on TdA gang misses mark on ties to Maduro regime, ex-Venezuela army officer says

Fox News

time33 minutes ago

  • Fox News

WATCH: US intel's take on TdA gang misses mark on ties to Maduro regime, ex-Venezuela army officer says

A former high-ranking officer in the Venezuelan military is contesting a recent report by the U.S. intelligence community about the massive Tren de Aragua gang present throughout the country. Jose Arocha, who is a former lieutenant colonel in the Venezuelan military, told Fox News Digital that the recent intel community report denying Tren de Aragua is linked to the Venezuelan dictator Nicolás Maduro is missing a key aspect: the socialist regime's animosity towards the United States and penchant for asymmetric warfare. Tren de Aragua, also known simply as TdA, is a violent Venezuelan gang that has been terrorizing U.S. cities over the last several years. The group is linked to high-profile murders such as the killing of Georgia nursing student Laken Riley and the seizure of an entire apartment building in Aurora, Colorado. As one of his first moves back in the Oval Office, President Donald Trump directed the State Department to designate TdA a "foreign terrorist organization." Speaking with Fox News Digital via Zoom, Arocha, a national security expert at the Center for a Secure Free Society, said he agrees with the Trump administration's moves against Tren de Aragua, which he believes is an "asymmetrical warfare" tool of the Maduro regime to sow discord in the United States and other countries in the Western Hemisphere. "The Maduro regime doesn't need to send troops to the USA. It sends criminals instead," he said. "TdA is a plug-and-play insurgency – assembled in prison, deployed abroad." Arocha's statements, however, contrast with a new public memo released by U.S. intelligence agencies last month that denied any solid connection between the Maduro government in Caracas and the gang. "While Venezuela's permissive environment enables TDA to operate, the Maduro regime probably does not have a policy of cooperating with TDA and is not directing TDA movement to and operations in the United States," the report states. The report says that the intelligence community based its conclusion "on Venezuelan law enforcement actions demonstrating the regime treats TDA as a threat; an uneasy mix of cooperation and confrontation rather than top-down directives [that] characterize the regime's ties to other armed groups; and the decentralized makeup of TDA that would make such a relationship logistically challenging." Arocha, meanwhile, said that "the missing point here is that the intelligence report is too narrow a lens about the TdA." "It's about crime and migration, but they're missing the warfare dimension," he said. "They are missing that for the Maduro regime, the United States is the enemy, has been the enemy for years." "The TdA is not a gang," he went on. "It's the enabler arm of the Venezuelan regime in the hybrid warfare strategy, the asymmetrical tour of war. That's the missing point. And that is the point that explains how a local gang is right now in more than 10 countries, including the United States. That's incredible, and that is not possible without a state sponsor behind them." While the report points to law enforcement actions the Maduro government has taken against TdA, Arocha explained that in reality Venezuelan prisons, including the "Tocorón" prison where the gang started, are more like resort hotels. "Tocorón, [which] they said is the epicenter of the crime in Venezuela, it wasn't a prison, it was a palace for organized crime. Full equipment, we have a zoo, nightclubs and even a pool for the prisoners there," he said. Arocha also posited that the 2023 raid the Venezuelan government conducted on Tocorón "appears choreographed" and that key TdA leadership was able to escape through pre-made tunnels. "While the regime gained optics of cracking down on crime, TdA's mobility remained intact," Arocha told Fox News Digital. The intel report admitted that the escaped TdA members were "possibly assisted by low-level Venezuelan military and political leaders." But to Arocha, the connection goes straight to the top. He pointed to the kidnapping and murder of Venezuelan political dissident Ronald Ojeda in Chile, which, according to Reuters, is being investigated by the Chilean government as a possible Tren de Aragua operation sponsored by the Maduro government. Reuters reported in March that Chilean Attorney General Angel Valencia said that Ojeda's murder "doesn't have the characteristics of a normal crime" and "all the evidence we have at this state of the investigation lets us conclude that a cell or group linked to the Tren de Aragua that was politically motivated that originated from an order of a political nature." The outlet also reported that the Venezuelan government denied the accusations as baseless. Arocha further pointed to former Maduro Vice President Tareck El Aissami, who has alleged ties to Hamas and Hezbollah, as evidence that the Venezuelan government is embedded with America's worst enemies. El Aissami was arrested on corruption charges and is currently in prison. "He has a strong influence with Iran and China and Russia, too. Right now, he's in prison, which means that he's living in the palace in prison," Arocha remarked, smiling. "The Venezuelan regime is a proxy of Russia, China and Iran, especially China right now," he went on. "They use Venezuela [to] create chaos in Latin America especially … not confronting directly the United States, but indirectly, using criminals, using disinformation, using every single tool they have." In response, Arocha urged the Trump administration to continue to take a whole-of-government approach in combating TdA. He urged the administration to "increase our scope" by reaching out to Latin American countries with experience with TdA, such as the Chilean government. "They have a knowledge right now about the TdA. We have to understand what they've learned about, and we have to put all the pieces together to have the big picture instead of the local one," he said. "And then I'm very sure that we are going to realize the missing and the main link is in Caracas."

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