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    Tables turn on Murdoch as scandal rocks his empire

    SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — To his many enemies, Rupert Murdoch is getting his comeuppance.

    Murdoch's tabloid newspapers long have reveled in the misdeeds of others with salacious photos and pun-packed headlines. Now, one of the world's most powerful media executives is learning what it's like to be enveloped in his own scandal.

    "There is a feeling that Murdoch has been king of the world for too long and it's about time that somebody brought him back to Earth," says Mungo MacCallum, a political journalist and commentator who once worked for a Murdoch-owned newspaper, The Australian.

    But no one is calling press conferences to gloat about Murdoch's troubles. Even his bitterest media rivals are keeping quiet.

    Liberty Media chief John Malone, who engaged in media-mogul head butting with Murdoch over his stake in Murdoch's News Corp and other issues, did not return a message seeking comment that was left with a spokeswoman.

    CNN founder Ted Turner, who once challenged Murdoch to a boxing match in Las Vegas, was unavailable, according to a spokesman.

    New York Daily News Publisher Mort Zuckerman, whose newspaper fights every day for front page dominance with the Post for New York's tabloid audience also did not return a message seeking comment.

    It's hardly surprising, of course. Despite a scandal that has claimed two of his top executives and led him to close one of his British tabloids, Murdoch still runs News Corp., one of the world's most imposing media empires. There's no percentage in gloating publicly about the scandal if you still have to compete — and perhaps do business — with the 80-year-old Murdoch.

    But others aren't as charitable. In recent days, Murdoch has drawn comparisons to a cruel monarch, Richard Nixon, even the devil.

    The scandal centers on revelations that journalists at his top-selling British tabloid, News of the World, gathered information through a variety of possibly illegal endeavors that included phone hacking and bribery of police officers. Last week, he closed the 168-year-old tabloid and withdrew a hard-fought bid for 100 percent ownership of prized satellite TV carrier British Sky Broadcasting. He even met with and apologized to the family of a missing, murdered girl whose phone was hacked by News Corp. journalists.

    On Friday, he accepted resignations from two top News Corp. executives, Rebekah Brooks, who ran News International, which controlled News of the World and the company's other British newspapers, and Dow Jones & Co. CEO Les Hinton, who used to run the same unit.

    The unfolding saga threatens to expose Murdoch and his company to further scorn and legal troubles. News Corp. stock has shed billions of dollars in value. And criminal investigations are under way in Britain, while the FBI has begun a preliminary inquiry in the U.S., where the company's holdings include the nation's largest newspaper, The Wall Street Journal, the New York Post, the Fox TV network and the 20th Century Fox movie studio.

    For now, Murdoch's job as News Corp.'s CEO is secure because he controls 40 percent of the company's voting stock through a family trust and the board is stacked with directors that shareholder activists have long criticized as his cronies. He also remains one of the world's richest people, although a fortune pegged at $7.6 billion in March by Forbes magazine has been clipped by a 13 percent decline in News Corp.'s stock during the past two weeks.

    But the British lawmakers who have traditionally supported Murdoch rather than risk being pilloried in the pages of his newspapers no longer seem to be in his corner because their fear of retaliation is fading. He will surely face tough questions Tuesday when he appears before a Parliament committee eager to grill him about the phone hacking and bribery allegations.

    "All the powerful allies that used to help him, either publicly or behind the scenes, have faded to the sidelines," says Eric Boehlert, a senior fellow at Media Matters, a liberal group that frequently criticizes Fox News for what it says is biased and inaccurate reporting. "He is on his own, and he is in over his head."

    Boehlert likens the crisis and widespread antipathy surrounding Murdoch to the unraveling of Richard Nixon's presidency in 1974 as details of the Watergate cover-up were revealed. Like Nixon then, Murdoch is in "free-fall mode. There is nothing he can do to stop this story," Boehlert says.

    The lack of control over the situation seemingly bothers the notoriously autocratic Murdoch, who told The Wall Street Journal on Thursday that he was "getting annoyed" with the media's unrelenting coverage of the scandal.

    If the scandal widens, newspaper analyst Ken Doctor believes Murdoch eventually will have to step down as CEO, though he could still retain the chairman's title.

    Disgraced newspaper publisher Conrad Black, whose former ownership of The Daily Telegraph turned him into a bitter Murdoch rival, thinks his old foe is more like another polarizing historical figure — French emperor Napoleon Bonaparte.

    Like Napoleon, Murdoch is a "great bad man," Black wrote in a column Wednesday for the Financial Times. "It is as wrong to dispute his greatness as his badness."

    Black, who was convicted of fraud in 2007 and still has some prison time to serve, wrote that it would be "astonishing" if Murdoch's British newspapers didn't commit crimes while "reveling in the climate of immunity that has been the group's modus operandi for decades."

    Although he stopped short of calling him a crook, Black lambasted Murdoch as an "an exploiter of the discomfort of others" and "a malicious myth-maker, an assassin of the dignity of others and of respected institutions, all in the guise of anti-elitism."

    The criticism exemplifies Britain's widespread antipathy toward Murdoch, says Porter Bibb, a former media executive and now managing partner of advisory firm Mediatech Capital Partners.

    "The people who are gloating now are much more in the U.K.," Bibb says. "He's really browbeaten the competition, most specifically the politicians."

    Murdoch also is despised by union workers who still remember how he used a new printing plant to foil a printers' strike in the gritty London district of Wapping in 1986 and 1987. Nic Oatridge, who lived in the area, recalls seeing police regularly harass and arrest picketers while making sure delivery trucks got into and out of the printing plant. That fed his suspicions that the police were in Murdoch's pocket.

    "I'm pleased he's been exposed," Oatridge, 55, says. "Something we've always believed was going on 25 years ago is finally going to be visible."

    In the U.S., much of the ill will toward Murdoch has stemmed from the belief that he uses his media properties, especially the Fox News cable channel, to promote a conservative political agenda. "There is essentially a partisan reaction against Murdoch and his use of right-wing politics," Doctor, the newspaper analyst, says.

    Fox News isn't covering Murdoch's scandal as aggressively as other outlets. From July 4 through July 13, Fox aired 30 segments about the story, according to an analysis by Media Matters. Rival CNN showed 109 segments and MSNBC 71.

    When Murdoch bought Dow Jones, parent company of the Wall Street Journal, for $5.7 billion in 2007, there were fears the Journal's quality would deteriorate. But Paul Steiger, who left as the Journal's top editor shortly after the acquisition was completed and started a non-profit journalism service called ProPublica, credits News Corp. for investing in the newspaper to maintain its quality and increase its circulation.

    "The hacking scandal in London makes me very sad, for the impact it may have on journalism in general," Steiger wrote in an email to The Associated Press. "But I see no evidence it has affected the Journal."

    Even so, some members of the family in control of the company that sold the Journal to Murdoch seized on the scandal to express seller's remorse. "We did a deal with the devil and it really saddens me," one of the family members, Bill Cox III, wrote in an email excerpt published by ProPublica on July 13.

    Hinton, 67, became the first of Murdoch's U.S. executives swept out in the scandal. He resigned Friday from his post as CEO of Dow Jones & Co. and publisher of The Wall Street Journal, ending a 52-year career working for Murdoch. Hinton was executive chairman of the division that included News of the World during some of the years in which the phone hacking occurred. He had assured British parliament in 2007 and 2009 that the hacking had been limited to a rogue reporter, an assertion that proved to be untrue. Hinton joined The Associated Press' board of directors in April.

    In his resignation statement, Hinton said he never knew about the rampant hacking at the British tabloid.

    MacCallum, the former reporter for The Australian newspaper, finds it hard to believe News Corp. executives weren't aware of what was going on at News of the World. "In the Murdoch organization, everybody knew what was going on," he says.

    Yet he doubts Murdoch himself would condone something as underhanded as phone hacking. "Murdoch's never been a devious back-stabbing operator," MacCallum says. "If he came after you, you knew he was coming after you."

    __

    Nakashima reported from Los Angeles. Associated Press writer Kristen Gelineau in Sydney contributed to this report.

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    106 comments

    • fishfinder  •  10 months ago
      the hunter becomes the hunted!
    • fishfinder  •  10 months ago
      FCC will shut down Fox News....Hannity and the other Fascists whose cynical exercise in overt political bias, yellow journalism, polarization, sensationalism and manufactured controversy, will soon be no more.....God works in mysterious ways!
      • JacobG 10 months ago
        you are clearly delusionall.
        So.....MSNBC is non bias?
      • ch2x 10 months ago
        Name one thing that MSNBC made up and did not answer to? Fox is in a totally different level in its aim to incite anger, controversy, and ultimately profit, at the expense of the mental clarity of the American public.
      • treetopflyer 10 months ago
        MSNBC isn't non biased. The don't claim to be fair and balanced either. There anchor people and commentators don't use their positions to sell their books, t-shirts and other lame trinkets either. Fox is about profit. It wouldn't even have good ratings if it didn't pay every fast food chain and cheap motel chain to run their channel 24/7 in their lobbies and restaurants.
    • Harry  •  10 months ago
      He came to the right country. With all the right wing nuts in the U.S., his criminal behavior is perfectly in tune with this bunch.
      • Mary 10 months ago
        boy that take a lot of guts coming from a retard stupid enough to vote for obummmer
      • pugetranger 10 months ago
        Thank you Mary for your literate and well reasoned reply.
      • ch2x 10 months ago
        Mary is so typical of Fox viewers... All Fox needed to do is to reinforce her misconceptions, bias, and anger to spring her into doing and saying stupid things. The fault does not lie with her. The fault lies with ourselves for allowing for-profit journalism to influence political opinion to the extend that it does.
    • rokarolla  •  10 months ago
      Prime Minister Cameron have your resignation on my desk in the morning!
    • pBear  •  10 months ago
      "the fish rots from the head down..."
    • Johnny Walker  •  10 months ago
      The old fart has made life miserable for so many who didn't deserve his headlining habits to increase his fortune through the pain and misery he inflicted so persistently and so often. May he bask in glow of his present misfortunes.
    • Anthony  •  10 months ago
      I want to see him cuffed and put into a dark, dank cell.
    • Whackey  •  10 months ago
      Mr. Murdoch is a cheat.
    • A still small voice  •  10 months ago
      Yet he has blessed us with the FOX Network and brought all the depraved crazies out of the woodworks to muck up our politicis even more.....and look, it distracted us from the class war that the ultra rich have been winning. Murdoch provide good cover to hide the perverted wealth grab by the ultra rich in this country....we were watching his collection of lunatics on FOX and missed the real power grab.
      • Lost Time 10 months ago
        Missed the real power grab? No one missed it, everyone saw it, but no one could do anything about it. How do you fight a determined billionaire? What about a couple of hundred thousand multimillionaires?

        Money buys safety. Poverty buys... 40 oz. bottles of beer for 2$? Money buys what politicians have sought over the centuries... allegiance. Protect the rich man's money and they will flock to your network or to your political party.
    • Duncan Idaho  •  10 months ago
      To kill the beast, you must cut off it's heads one at a time....and cauterize each, so that another won't grow back. After you have severed all of the heads, and cauterized each, you still must cut off the immortal head and bury it under a rock........Hercules' Labors apply in modern times as well. The war against evil is eternal.
    • Rusty Shachalferd  •  10 months ago
      Doesn't Murdoch look like that Ghoul from 'Tales from the Crypt?' I swear, if they were standing together at a cocktail party, I wouldn't be able to tell them apart. Perhaps they are the same person. After all, has anyone ever seen them together?
    • Jim  •  10 months ago
      Rot in Hell, you reptilian-faced, Satanic, Zionist war pig.
      • tandi ketelslegers 10 months ago
        Jim everything is funny till Zionist. Now you do know he is not even remotely Jewish right - this man is as christian as they come - father was a reverend
      • Jim 10 months ago
        Tandi,
        I assume you are being sarcastic. Sorry I gave you the thumbs down. LOL!
      • imhappynow 10 months ago
        the dude is so wealthy he wont worry bout a thing
    • Katrina  •  10 months ago
      Break up this immoral cartel! Let the two honest sons take parts of the media evil empire and put the rest up for sale. Let this be a lesson to all monopolies - govern yourself or you will find the same fate awaits you. Musty Murdoch and Babbling Brooks failed to fulfill their very job responsibilities: to govern their holdings within the laws of their respective lands.
    • tandi ketelslegers  •  10 months ago
      This is what happens when you think you are untouchable - you become too corrupt and do things with such impunity, There is a reason why there is a saying "absolute power corrupts" You have a tv station that talks about corruption in thrid world countries yet here you are steeped in corruption - pitiful.
    • Susan  •  10 months ago
      SO GLAD THIS CROOK HAS BEEN EXPOSED ----APOLOGIZING FOR HACKING HELPLESS PEOPLE IS JUST THE TIP OF THE ICEBERG-------POLITICIANS ARE AFRAID OF THIS OUTFIT BOTH IN THE UK AND MOST IMPORTANT HERE IN THE US-----NO ONE CRIMINAL OUTFIT LIKE THIS SHOULD HAVE THAT MUCH POWER-------WE THE STUPID PUBLIC HANG ON EVERY LIE THEY PUT OUT SO THEY ARE THE ONES IN CONTROL------VERY SAD FOR MY COUNTRY
    • R.  •  10 months ago
      Well, what goes around, comes around. It could not have happened to a nicer guy.
    • ch2x  •  10 months ago
      >>... Wall Street Journal, ..... But Paul Steiger..., credits News Corp. for investing in the newspaper to maintain its quality and increase its circulation.<< Yeah, that's why WSJ published an "exclusive" interview piece for Murdoch proclaiming his company's virtues. Independent journalism?? Hardly.
    • ALKALINE  •  10 months ago
      Somewhat ironic that a media mogul like Murdock is "annoyed" by the press.
    • M.  •  10 months ago
      it doesn't matter what murdoch knew or didn't know.
      responsibility still rests with the one who puts him-/herself in charge.
      no matter what.
      so murdoch is responsible.
      period.

      that said, what's really of interest is how it happened that he was *allowed* to be in charge of so many media across continents --

      (goebbel's nazi propaganda ministerium, anyone?)
    • No More Mr. Nice Guy  •  10 months ago
      Fox News is nothing but a tabloid.

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