The L.A. Times’ Owner Takes the Red Pill. Plus. . . Who’s afraid of the DOGE boys? Trump says the U.S. will ‘take over’ Gaza. Questions for NPR’s CEO. And more.
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It’s Wednesday, February 5. This is The Front Page, your daily window into the world of The Free Press—and our take on the world at large. Coming up: The boys of DOGE, Uri Berliner on how to hold NPR accountable, Daniel Penny gets a job, Trump promises to “take over” the Gaza Strip, a Free Presser’s mea culpa, and much more. But first: The owner of the L.A. Times takes the red pill. If you’re a regular reader of The Free Press, you’ll be familiar with the idea of the vibe shift—the rightward swing in our politics and culture in the months before and after Trump’s election. Nowhere has that trend been clearer than in tech and media: From Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg’s metamorphosis into a free speech warrior and Jeff Bezos’s “optimism” about a second Trump term to MSNBC hosts Joe Scarborough and Mika Brzezinski bending the knee at Mar-a-Lago, the vibes have most definitely shifted. In all these examples, an interesting question is whether the ideological shift is sincere, or just a cynical ploy by someone keen to stay in favor with the powers that be. One curious case is Patrick Soon-Shiong, the owner of the Los Angeles Times, who has undergone a dramatic about-face. Not so long ago, Soon-Shiong was using his paper to rail against systemic racism. Today, he’s publicly endorsing RFK Jr. and says he regrets the fact that his paper endorsed LA mayor Karen Bass. What’s the real story behind Soon-Shiong’s change of heart? That was our question when we dispatched Free Press reporter Peter Savodnik to interview Soon-Shiong, the son of Chinese immigrants who claims to be “putting in motion a platform that allows people to go back and trust the media again.” Read Peter’s full profile: “The Owner of the L.A. Times Takes the Red Pill.” Further evidence of the vibe shift comes courtesy of Olivia Reingold, who got the scoop on the news that Daniel Penny has been hired by Silicon Valley VC firm Andreessen Horowitz. Read the full story here. Uri Berliner: What Congress Should Ask NPR’s Chief From a media owner trying to regain trust to a media CEO who just doesn’t seem to get it. It’s been ten months since Uri Berliner wrote his viral essay for The Free Press on how NPR, his journalistic home for 25 years, lost the trust of a large segment of the country. At the time, rather than heed his warning, many of his former colleagues responded by shooting the messenger. Now, with Republicans in control in Washington, publicly funded media is facing an existential crisis. Katherine Maher, NPR’s CEO, along with PBS chief Paula Kerger, have been summoned to defend public media’s budget before the House subcommittee on DOGE next month. No doubt, partisans on both sides will put on a political circus. But if those lawmakers are interested in generating more light than heat, what should they ask the bosses? Well, Uri has some ideas. Read his suggestions here. The Boys of DOGE Many of the lads helping Elon Musk decide the fate of America’s administrative state are barely old enough to order a drink. They include 22-year-old Luke Farritor, who, coincidentally, The Free Press profiled last year after he won a $250,000 prize for using AI to help decode one of the ancient scrolls found near the ruins of Pompeii. Then there’s 21-year-old Akash Bobba, a Berkeley student and former intern at the Bridgewater Associates investment firm. And also Ethan Shaotran, a 22-year-old senior at Harvard University, who launched his own AI start-up with a $100,000 grant from OpenAI. Their youth has shocked and horrified many of Washington’s middle-aged pundits and journalists. But, writes Eli Lake, “before you reach for the Valium, it’s worth considering that this is by no means the first time twentysomethings have helped lead a revolution inside the nation’s capital.” Read Eli’s full column on “The Boys of DOGE.” DOGE Comes for the Cocaine Dogs It’s not just “mass headcount reductions” that Emperor Elon—excuse me— government efficiency czar Elon Musk has promised. Also on the chopping block is $1 trillion in government spending. Some of these cuts, like those at USAID and the Department of Education, have been controversial. But DOGE has also drawn attention to some undeniably unwise government purchases. In the latest Free Press video, we run through some of the more absurd examples, like $10,000 to support Bearded Ladies Cabaret, a musical ice skating performance focused on climate change. Or $75,000 for a study on lizards being blown out of trees. Or the $6.9 million toward research into “smart toilets” that recognize a user’s “anal print.” Or the cocaine dogs. Watch below and find out what on earth I’m talking about:
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