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The O'Reilly Factor

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O'Reilly Factor promotional image from FoxNews.com
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O'Reilly Factor promotional image from FoxNews.com

The O'Reilly Factor is a show on the Fox News Channel hosted by commentator Bill O'Reilly that discusses current political and social issues with guests from opposing ends of the political spectrum.

The show premiered in 1996 along with the FOX News Channel. It was previously known as the O'Reilly Report, and his first guest was General Barry McCaffrey, then the Director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy (or "Drug Czar").

The show is well-known for its confrontational approach, as O'Reilly often gets heated during arguments with guests which has created much controversy. Further, O'Reilly ends each episode of The Factor by reading viewer mail which is usually equally divided between those that like him and those that hate him. Commonly, both letters accusing O'Reilly of having a left-wing bias and letters accusing him of having a right-wing bias will be included in the batch. Many times that may include an extreme right, extreme left, and a more neutral point of view of the subject. Despite the mix of views in the letters selected for on-air reading, columnists and news broadcasters routinely call him a conservative pundit, a label whose accuracy he denies.

Format

The program is done "live to tape", meaning that unlike other Fox News Channel programs at night, The O'Reilly Factor is prerecorded. The program is live for breaking news or special events. The show usually tapes between 5 and 7 p.m. Eastern Standard Time, although some guests are interviewed before the "live to tape" period and are slotted in the program as appropriate. (Some guests have suggested that interviews are edited after taping, although O'Reilly's producers insist that editing happens only when an interview exceeds the available length in a program of which the total is 43 minutes for an hour-long slot, once commercials and news breaks are added.[link][link])

O'Reilly and his producers discuss potential topics twice a week. [link] A producer will research the story and book guests for O'Reilly, and an information packet will be produced with possible angles for O'Reilly to explore. The producers will often "pre-interview" the guest so that they know what potential points he will make. [link] For each show, O'Reilly with the assistance of his staff will produce a script with the words for the "Talking Points Memo" and "Most Ridiculous Item of the Day" segments, and points of discussion and questions for the guests that will appear on the program.

O'Reilly divides his show into titled segments, appearing in the following general order. Not all segments appear in all programs, and occasionally segments will repeat.

Occasionally, the following segments appear:

When O'Reilly cannot host the show, Fox News Channel selects his replacement. Depending on the substitute's time frame, the program may be live more often, especially with John Gibson. Sometimes a previous show is rebroadcast but this has become more rare to the point of not happening anymore. A notable interview will usually reair filling up one or more segments in a show with a guest host.

Vocabulary

After reading the viewer's e-mails, O'Reilly usually ends by encouraging the viewers to contact him, but requests them to keep their comments pithy and not to bloviate (adding with tongue in cheek: "That is my job"). While instructing viewers on the kind of emails to write, O'Reilly continuously uses words that are out of the standard vocabulary of the average viewer, telling them to "run to the dictionary". Opinions on O’Reilly’s use of such "vocabulary" words range from enjoyment to hatred. Some viewers enjoy his use of words out of the mainstream by allowing them to expand their own vocabularies. However, others resent this, believing he is only using such words to prop himself up by appearing more intelligent than his audience. To this end, it is worth noting that he tends to use the same handful of words repeatedly. Below is a list of obscure words used by Bill O'Reilly and their definitions:

Regular guests

Frequent Topics

Parodies

Stephen Colbert spoofs Bill O'Reilly's "Talking Points Memo" segment.
On October 17, 2005, The Colbert Report premiered on Comedy Central. The show, hosted by Stephen Colbert, is a satirical spoof of The O'Reilly Factor, spoofing both its format and the mannerisms and ideology of O'Reilly, whom Colbert calls Papa Bear. Colbert makes no secret of his spoofing O'Reilly: upon hearing the news that O'Reilly said he likes The Colbert Report, Stephen declared on-air that "I like you too. In fact, if it wasn't for you, this show wouldn't exist." Many of Stephen Colbert's attitudes, actions, or program segments are directly inspired by O'Reilly's show.

The O'Reilly Factor has also been spoofed on Saturday Night Live by Darrell Hammond and on Mad TV by Michael McDonald.

Allegations of Bias

During discussions about controversial subjects, The O'Reilly Factor typically features guests with opposing viewpoints. Regardless of Mr. O'Reilly's assessment and opinion, he often grants airtime to both sides of the spectrum on most issues. However, he has been known to interrupt a guest when he feels that the guest is "spinning" (or when he disagrees with) the subject, and he often interjects his opinion during the debate. O'Reilly acknowledges his show is an editorial program rather than a strictly neutral news report. [link]

Regardless of the content of the show, O'Reilly always presents an equal number of letters from conservatives accusing him of being too liberal, and from liberals accusing him of being too conservative. It is unknown whether this equal proportion is indicative of all the viewer mail he gets, especially since criticism of O'Reilly over being a conservative is far more widespread, particularly on the Internet, in numerous newspaper editorial columns, and even by politicians.

Some claim the show has a tendency to exclude guests who are neither Republican nor Democrat, thus showing O'Reilly's bias in favor of the two-party system. During the 2004 U.S. Presidential election, O'Reilly's show allegedly reneged at the last minute on granting Libertarian candidate Michael Badnarik air time. [link] However, Ralph Nader has been a guest during both his 2000 and 2004 campaigns for president and also after the 9/11 attacks. [link][link]

A study performed by Media Matters, a liberal watchdog group, found that over a period of 4 months, the percentage of conservative guests varied from 35% to 42%, liberal guests varied from 14% to 19%, and neutral guests varied from 40% to 47%. This report would seem to contradict the claim that O'Reilly excludes independents, while reinforcing the claim of his conservative bent. [link]The study did not however, take into account liberal-leaning guests who were invited but declined to appear on the show.

On Bill O'Reilly's off days, the show is guest-hosted by openly right-of-center or sometimes outright conservative Fox News personalities like John Kasich, Tony Snow, and John Gibson, and rarely hosted by a liberal (Geraldo Rivera being the exception). This adds to the perception that Fox News Channel considers The O'Reilly Factor to be a conservative show, and tries to maintain this image through the show's guest hosts.

People who decline to appear on The Factor

O'Reilly has invited people who have been critical of him(or vice versa) and/or dealing with a controversial situation that have declined or ignored the invitation. O'Reilly may say they are "hiding under their desk" or "dodging" or may just say the invitee declined. He has even referred to them as cowards at times. Some guests may have initially not gone on the show but then end up appearing later.

Some that have been invited but have not gone on include:

People whom O'Reilly refuses to allow on The Factor

External links

 


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