Tucker Carlson now has his own streaming service.
The former Fox News host announced Monday the launch of the Tucker Carlson Network.
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Subscribers will have access to five new shows, speeches, films and more from Carlson, according to his website. The service will also include investigative reports, short documentaries and behind-the-scenes looks at Carlson’s biggest interviews, and it will offer subscribers the opportunity to email Carlson directly, with answers appearing in episodes of an “Ask Tucker” series.
The service costs $9 a month, or $72 for the full year.
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“Something big is coming. You can probably feel it. Everybody can feel it. The next 12 months is going to be a wild time, probably like nothing any of us have ever seen,” Carlson said in a video posted on his website, as he predicted an “economic meltdown,” an “unresolvable presidential race,” “unprecedented global migration” and “metastasizing foreign wars.”
“Suddenly everything seems at stake — control the world and of your soul,” he added.
“We’ve decided that we need something new, something relentlessly honest that the corporate gatekeepers can’t touch,” Carlson said. “So we built a company called Tucker Carlson Network.”
According to The Wall Street Journal, citing sources familiar with the matter, the streaming service will initially be available only through TuckerCarlson.com and executives are exploring distribution through streaming-TV apps and X, the platform formerly known as Twitter. Some ad-supported content will be accessible without a subscription on both Carlson’s website and X, the newspaper reported.
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Fox News fired Carlson in April. The move came just days after the network’s parent company settled a lawsuit for $787.5 million with Dominion Voting Systems, which accused Fox News of promoting lies about the 2020 presidential election.
In the months since, Carlson, who had the highest-rated cable TV news show while at Fox, has posted monologues and interviews on X.
Fox reportedly sent the former host a cease-and-desist letter in June demanding he stop posting the videos. Fox claimed the videos violated Carlson’s contract with the network, which it was still paying.
Fox News did not immediately respond to an email from Spectrum News on Monday morning asking whether Carlson remains under contact and, if so, if the network believes his streaming service violates the contract.
Former White House adviser Neil Patel, Carlson’s former college roommate and business partner on the conservative news site The Daily Caller, is serving as the Tucker Carlson Network’s chief executive, The Wall Street Journal reported. Justin Wells, Carlson’s former executive producer at Fox News, is the services’ president and oversees all programming, according to the newspaper.
Source: https://t-tees.com
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