{"id":128251,"date":"2022-07-12T01:03:37","date_gmt":"2022-07-12T01:03:37","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/fin2me.com\/?p=128251"},"modified":"2022-07-12T01:03:37","modified_gmt":"2022-07-12T01:03:37","slug":"nyt-reporter-says-this-is-how-trump-has-likely-been-consuming-the-jan-6-hearings","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/fin2me.com\/politics\/nyt-reporter-says-this-is-how-trump-has-likely-been-consuming-the-jan-6-hearings\/","title":{"rendered":"NYT reporter says this is how Trump has likely been consuming the Jan. 6 hearings"},"content":{"rendered":"

(CNN Business)<\/cite>The select committee investigating the January 6 insurrection has done so many things well that even with at least one more hearing left, it’s tempting to declare the telecasts a major media triumph.<\/p>\n

What the first six hearings have already accomplished is noteworthy: They offered millions of people a narrative of the insurrection based on facts, documentary images and eyewitness testimony given under oath rather than the alternative account Trump and his allies have promulgated through right-wing media.
\nAt or near the top of the list of media and political accomplishments is the way the committee and its adviser, former ABC News President James Goldston, have offered a template for adapting congressional hearings and perhaps other government proceedings to the new media reality of fragmented audiences and short attention spans. They have managed to make the hearings more compelling without dumbing them down, using made-for-TV storytelling techniques to offer a highly engaging mass-audience civics lesson to a nation that no longer teaches civics in too many of its classrooms.<\/p>\n