Did an msnbc producer quit because the network is a 'cancer,' stoking 'national division'?

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Claim: An MSNBC producer quit her job with a scathing letter calling the network a "cancer." What's True Ariana Pekary left her job as a producer at MSNBC on July 24, 2020,


citing in an open letter her moral misgivings with the commercial news model. What's False Right-leaning media framed Pekary's letter as an attack, specifically, on the liberal


MSNBC, rather than a critique of the entire commercial news model. In early August 2020, Snopes readers asked about a story posted to The Political Insider website with the headline,


"MSNBC Producer Quits, Says Her Channel Is A 'Cancer' That 'Stokes National Division.'" It's true that on Aug. 3, 2020, Ariana Pekary announced that she


had resigned from her job as a producer for cable news station MSNBC, doing so with an open letter that detailed her moral misgivings with the commercial model the cable station follows. But


it's misleading to state that Pekary's letter was directed solely at the liberal MSNBC, because Pekary's critique was aimed at the entirety of the commercial news industry,


which she said offers viewers ideological bias-confirming sensationalism over informative and nuanced reporting. Pekary was forced to follow her original open letter with a clarification,


noting that in reporting on her resignation, Fox News had inadvertently proved her point by misleadingly telling its audience that Pekary's letter was directed solely at MSNBC.


"MSNBC producer resigns from network with scathing letter: They block 'diversity of thought' and 'amplify fringe voices,'" the Fox News headline reported.


However, Pekary had said in her original statement that in her observation, important information, stories, and nuance were often left out of broadcasts in favor of booking guests and


discussion topics that would drive ratings and revenue, and that the problem far goes beyond MSNBC. Pekary wrote: > You may not watch MSNBC but just know that this problem still > 


affects you, too. All the commercial networks function the same – > and no doubt that content seeps into your social media feed, one way > or the other. >  > It’s possible that 


I’m more sensitive to the editorial process > due to my background in public radio, where no decision I ever > witnessed was predicated on how a topic or guest would “rate.” > The 


longer I was at MSNBC, the more I saw such choices — it’s > practically baked in to the editorial process – and those > decisions affect news content every day. Likewise, it’s taboo to


> discuss how the ratings scheme distorts content, or it’s simply > taken for granted, because everyone in the commercial broadcast news > industry is doing the exact same thing.


>  > But behind closed doors, industry leaders will admit the damage > that’s being done. >  > “We are a cancer and there is no cure,” a successful and > insightful TV 


veteran said to me. “But if you could find a cure, > it would change the world.” We reached out to Pekary via her website for further comment, but didn't hear back in time for


publication. But in her follow-up statement, posted Aug. 4, 2020, Pekary stated: > As it turns out, Fox News inadvertently proved me right. My concern, > clearly stated in the post, is


 with the entire industry because each > outlet uses the same funding model. That includes Fox News, of > course, but they couldn’t help but to turn my statement into a > divisive 


piece of clickbait. The headline skewed the intention of my > piece and they removed almost all of the context in which I explain > the systemic nature of the problem. That is 


unfortunate, but not > surprising. >  > I regret if my piece was presented as an attack on a single network, > but that only gives me motivation to continue on this new path.


> It’s just another example of the division I’m trying to > alleviate. My purpose isn’t to drive people away from the > industry, but to raise awareness (as a first step). We all 


deserve > better and we can do better. On Twitter, Pekary credited the New York Daily News for accurately capturing her sentiments with a headline that read, "Ex-MSNBC producer pens


back-to-back posts saying MSNBC and Fox News let ratings stoke 'division.'" It's true that Pekary resigned from her position with MSNBC and accompanied her decision with


an open latter criticizing the network. But stories reporting that her criticism was directed solely at MSNBC were misleading, because she expressed opposition to the commercial model that


drives journalists at such outlets to prioritize sensationalism and ideological bias for the sake of viewership over important, nuanced, but less splashy topics, stories and experts. We


therefore rate this claim "Mixture."