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I started out 2022 by predicting that the mainstream media was in the midst of losing the fight of its life at the hands of popular podcaster and comedian Joe Rogan. I then discussed the topic and my reasoning for an hour on a podcast with independent journalist Ivory Hecker.

No media outlet has proven me right this year quite like CNN has.
Through honest and open dialogue, often in good faith and jest, Rogan has earned himself innumerably more viewers than almost all outlets in mainstream media on both sides of the aisle. He officially started putting the screws to the mainstream media, in my opinion, when he refused to settle for the âcompany lineâ on Covid, dutifully peddled by Dr. Anthony Fauci and various government regulators, and welcomed alternative points of view on treatments, lockdowns and how the world was handling the pandemic.
I wrote back in January that I thought it was the invitations Rogan extended to iconoclastic guests, like Dr. Robert Malone, M.D., that officially marked the beginning of the end the âofficialâ Covid narratives going unquestioned. I predicted that Roganâs willingness to have an alternative dialogue would force the mainstream media to eventually fall in line, and would throw a wet blanket over the âjournalismâ of parroting whatever âthe scienceâ dictated was objective truth that week.

âFor 2022, Iâm gonna make a bold prediction. The media, and maybe even politicians, are going to start to realize that the narratives that they have been pushing with regard to Covid, lockdowns, vaccinations and our economy are no longer being accepted at face value by their viewers,â I wrote in January.
I predicted:
âThe same capitalistic engine keeping Joe Rogan on the air is going to force the change in legacy media. While they may not correct themselves totally or do a full 180°turn, they will fall in line behind those breaking new ground in the space â content creators like Rogan â and they will start to commit more to reason and less to political narratives.â
Nine months later, CNN stands as a shell of its former self, with several personnel including Jeff Zucker, John Harwood and Brian Stelter either resigning or being cancelled, other anchors like Don Lemon being demoted, the companyâs CNN+ streaming platform discarded as an abject $300 million failure, and the network desperately trying to adopt a business model that can cauterize the open wound of defecting viewers.
Or, as Sean Hannity put it:

Lo and behold, The New York Post summed up the pivot (or as I called it, the âfalling in lineâ), as follows:
â[Chris] Licht, who has been at the helm of CNN for a few months, has been given a mandate by his corporate bosses at Warner Bros. Discovery to steer the cable network away from opinion-based programming and more toward hard news.â
You certainly canât say the whole thing wasnât a mess of CNNâs own making. Not only did the network carry the âofficialâ narrative for the Democratic Party over the last couple of years, they also made the mistake of targeting Joe Rogan directly, when the announced that he had used the drug ivermectin to treat Covid late last year.
CNN went on what I can only describe as a blatantly false misinformation campaign, inaccurately accusing Rogan of taking the veterinary form of ivermectin, used to de-worm horses, while plastering their network with both banners and lobotomized talking heads who were happy to prattle on about the networkâs take on the situation.

The campaign was especially egregious because CNN was essentially alleging that Rogan was so stupid and such a conspiracy theorist that he would purposely take horse de-wormer instead of just falling in line, adhering to âthe scienceâ and sticking to Pfizer-endorsed Covid treatments only.
This hairbrained campaign by CNN was met by a casual threat when Rogan joked about potentially suing the network because of their claims.
Watch the video below:
Rogan then promptly put the screws to CNNâs on-network doctor, Sanjay Gupta.
âItâs a lie. Itâs a lie on a news network. And itâs a lie thatâs a willingâŠthat theyâre conscious of. Itâs not a mistake. Theyâre unfavorably framing it as veterinary medicine,â Rogan said to Gupta.
âWhy would you say that when youâre talking about a drug thatâs been given out to billions and billions of people? Why would they lie and say thatâs horse de-wormer?â
âThey shouldnât have said that,â Gupta was forced to uncomfortably admit.
âThey shouldnât have done that,â Gupta says again.
âItâs defamatory!â Rogan replies. âSix days after infection I was back at the gym.â
The Mortal Kombat-style âFINISH HIMâ moment came when Rogan asked:
âYouâre working for a news organization. If theyâre lying about a comedian taking horse medication, what are they telling us about Russia? What are they telling us about Syria?â
The aftermath of the situation resulted in tremendous embarrassment for the news network, whose viewership at the time paled in comparison to that of Roganâs.
It was a true comeuppance for CNN and it was long overdue.

After years of willingly peddling what turned out to be a false narrative regarding President Trump and Russia, CNN solidified any doubts anybody may have had about their true biases and who they were carrying water for with their coverage of Rogan.
It should come as no surprise that the network self-immolated in the months that followed.
CNN attempted to launch its own streaming service shortly thereafter, and effort that The New York Times characterized as a ânear instant collapseâ that âamounted to one of the most spectacular media failures in years.â
They called it a â$300 million experiment that ended abruptly with layoffs in the offing and careers in disarray.â

On the legacy network, Brian Stelter was canned because CNNâs boss reportedly was trying to get CNN to âevolve back to the kind of journalism that it started with, and actually have journalists, which would be unique and refreshing.â
Because, obviously, Brian Stelter wasnât much of a journalist.
And the hits didnât stop there. Like a drunk being escorted out of a bar at 2AM, fellow Mensa-candidate Don Lemon was ushered out of his primetime spot in favor of a morning time-slot. It was an obvious demotion that Lemon seemed to take well and handle with grace.
Just kidding. Lemon had an embarrassing full-scale on-air toke of the copium in a cringe-worthy segment, smiling maniacally and raving about how he wasnât actually demoted.

Further proving that he is fully in touch with reality, with absolutely no cognitive distortions whatsoever, Lemon went with the bold strategy of referring to his demotion as a promotion.
âI was not demoted. None of that. This is an opportunity. This is a promotion. This is an opportunity for me to create something around me and I get to work with two great ladies [Poppy Harlow and Kaitlan Collins] who you know.â
As I wrote above, thereâs no doubt in my mind that the moment it became clear that Rogan was doing the work the mainstream media should have been doing was when he brought on Dr. Peter McCullough and Dr. Robert Malone to offer their opinions about Covid.
Putting aside your thoughts on these two credentialed doctors â and their opinion on Covid â it was simply the willingness to engage them in dialogue that I think finally made it clear to the public, and perhaps the higher ups at CNN, that carrying water for âthe scienceâ and the Biden administration was no longer a winning strategy. Instead, it was likely having the opposite effect.
And when all was said and done the entire ordeal was a relatively low-key flex for Rogan. Despite a couple of moments chuckling about it, he didnât seem to take the whole incident too seriously after it had passed and he allowed the situation to resolve itself. After all, when youâre the king of the media world, thatâs likely the winning attitude to adopt; thereâs no point in routinely punching downward.
But for me, CNN and the rest of the mainstream media are still upwards of my trajectory â which is why I have no problem sharing my opinion that CNNâs last six months of scorched Earth could very well also play out for other obviously biased news organizations that let their emotions get the best of them and, as a result, cross boundaries in their reporting.
My mother, who leans left, often makes a great point about news networks. She says that no matter what side they are rooting for, they all have their own agenda. She is 100% right, but, in my opinion, CNN took it one step further than just having an agenda. Now, theyâre facing the very real consequences. And donât get me wrong, I think the same exact thing would happen to Fox News if they branched out too far on the right and simply started to lie, openly, about popular public figures.
The mainstream media has definitely hit an immovable object in The Joe Rogan Experience. Heâs doing everything they arenât: asking open-minded questions, not pandering to either political party, thinking for himself and encouraging others to do the same.
The lesson that other media organizations can now learn the easy way is the same one that CNN just learned the hard way: stay in your (heavily biased) lane. The âmainstreamâ has a new face.
Quoth the Raven is a journalist who writes substack articles. This article was originally published on QTRâs Fringe Finance.
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