By Becket Adams
Sunday, December 07, 2025
Attend any event hosted by a conservative group these
days, and chances are you’ll hear something about the death rattle of the
legacy media.
You’ll probably hear a lot of boasting about the rise of
“new media” and a bright new reality where alternative voices are now as
influential as Walter Cronkite was in his heyday. Gone are the days of total
media gatekeeping, when Democratic scandals rarely, if ever, saw the full light
of day, leaving no recourse for the average news consumer. The right and middle
have podcasts, YouTube shows, and roughly a billion websites all claiming to be
news outlets. It’s morning in America!
I’m sorry to be the bearer of bad news: Reports of legacy
media’s demise are greatly exaggerated. It’s not so dead or irrelevant as some
would have you believe.
As someone who has been in the business for nearly 15
years and has spent the past three-plus years training aspiring journalists in
the nation’s capital, I’m here to tell you that conservative and alternative
media are not yet living in a golden era of a leveled playing field. The
information wars may not be as lopsided as they were back when only a fistful
of newspapers and the alphabet networks had a stranglehold on the news. But the
major leagues of the New York Times, the Washington Post, NBC
News, ABC News, CBS News, etc., still have institutional heft, power, and at
least some perceived credibility, even if it’s not now what it once was.
The legacy league, which skews overwhelmingly left, still
has the power to shape consequential narratives, leading to resignations,
reforms, new laws, and even wars. Don’t take my word for it. We were given a
stark reminder of this last week with reports of Minnesota’s Somali diaspora
looting the state’s generous welfare programs — breathtaking, far-reaching
scams that appear to have been enabled by government officials.
Much of the recent political and cultural discourse
around this scandal has focused on a November 29 New York Times report
titled, “How Fraud Swamped Minnesota’s Social Services System on Tim
Walz’s Watch.” Among the most disturbing details revealed in the story is
that federal prosecutors believe that members of Minnesota’s Somali community
have stolen more than $1 billion in taxpayers’ money, and that the government
employees who first questioned the mountains of cash flowing into the coffers
of Somali scammer groups were scared off after the groups warned none too
subtly that it would be racist to audit the numbers.
It’s a solid article, and the New York Times deserves
credit for pursuing it. But here’s the thing: The Times isn’t the first
to report on the fraud epidemic. It’s not even the first news outlet to report
this month on the scale of the scandal. On November 19, before the Times
story appeared, journalists Chris Rufo and Ryan Thorpe published in City
Journal a story titled “The Largest Funder of Al-Shabaab Is the Minnesota Taxpayer,”an
equally, if not more, alarming report. The subhead reads, “How some of the
state’s welfare funds ended up in the hands of a terror group.”
Chances are you’ve heard about the City Journal report.
Chances are you heard about it only because it caught President Trump’s
attention, prompting him to comment publicly on the matter, which then
compelled the press to report his remarks in context.
But that’s essentially the whole point about legacy
media’s reach and influence compared with that of right-of-center media. You
probably only know about the Rufo and Thorpe report, if you’re aware of it at
all, because the White House promoted it. No greater bullhorn has man
conceived. If you removed the New York Times, Trump, and coverage of his
comments from the equation while keeping everything else the same, I guarantee
we wouldn’t be having the conversation we’re having now about Minnesota.
Why? Because right-leaning outlets such as the Daily Wire, the Daily Caller, the Washington Examiner, and National Review have covered the situation in Minnesota
since at least 2022. It’s only now, with the double whammy of Trump forcing the
issue and the New York Times “legitimizing” it, that we’re finally
having a serious national conversation about whatever the hell is happening in
Minnesota.
From a media and politics perspective, there are key
takeaways that need pointing out and questions that need answering.
First, why are we only now hearing from a legacy media
outlet about the broader scope of the Minnesota scandal? The state’s governor,
the hapless dweeb Tim Walz, was a vice presidential candidate barely more than
a year ago. Where were the national opposition teams? Why didn’t we have this
conversation during the general election, when scandals of this magnitude
typically capture the press’s attention? It’s not as if we didn’t know then
that something was seriously wrong in Minnesota. In 2022, the Justice Department
charged 47 Somali scammers for their role in looting the state treasury. The
media covered it at the time. What we have now, and what was available for
investigation then, is a better, more shocking understanding of the sheer
brazenness of the fraud, the number of convicted and potential conspirators,
and the levels of corruption and incompetence rampant in the state’s
government.
The final point to consider is that, despite the
fragmentation of the old media system, the decline in trust in traditional news
media, and the rise of social media and other mass communication platforms,
alternative and right-leaning media still face an uphill battle for
credibility. You can produce something that’s original, thorough, and
exclusive, but without the institutional support of a major media outlet or a
boost from a well-known celebrity, it simply won’t receive the same exposure,
“legitimacy,” or influence as reports from legacy organizations.
Even the Republican Party, which has made hating legacy
media a core part of its personality, recognizes this. It understands that
traditional media still have institutional authority, credibility, and
influence. If you’re a Republican and you want a story to gain traction, and
you aim to reach the broadest audience possible with a message you think
they’ll believe and trust, you often go to legacy media.
Consider, for a moment, the recent example of the
bombshell scoop from National Review’s Audrey Fahlberg, who uncovered a series of
private texts in which Virginia Attorney General-elect Jay Jones fantasized
about killing a GOP lawmaker and also wished death upon his children. Fahlberg
got the story, one no one else had. Still, a Republican ad highlighting what
Jones texted began with, “The
Washington Post confirms . . .” (NR was mentioned later).
No hard feelings — the decision made political sense,
considering the campaign wanted to persuade a broader, general election
audience. There’s a bigger point here, I assure you.
When GOP campaigns give first billing to legacy media
over right-leaning media, it’s clear who has the clout. Again, look no further
than how the Somali land-pirate story has played out. For all the right’s
reports, podcasts, and tweets, what actually moved the ball on this issue? It
was that darn “fake news” media. (Yes, Trump played a role, but he’s a
character in the landscape, not the landscape itself.) Conservative media have
been all over the Minnesota story, but I can guarantee that your normie aunt didn’t
know anything about it until a mainstream news outlet decided to investigate it
further.
That’s the power of the so-called dying news media. The New
York Times can still gate-keep a story. The Washington Post can
still command enough respect and credibility to enjoy top billing in Republican
ads.
Things are better than they once were, but not that
much better that we should be writing obits for the heavy hitters of the news
industry. There’s still a lot of work to do, starting with a renewed emphasis
on original, investigative journalism. If conservative media want to compete in
this space, they need to corner the information market and become obsessed with
scoops. They need to make themselves indispensable and impossible to ignore.
You don’t do this with punditry. You do it with news stories. You do it by
reporting information that no one else has.
There will still be an uphill battle for credibility, but
a culture of solid investigation, backed by a body of original, unassailable
exclusives, will make that battle much easier to win.
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