Did Fox Really Fire Tucker Carlson for Crossing the 'Red Line' of Criticizing Big Pharma, as RFK Jr. Claims?
If so, the network failed to enforce the supposed rule before and after cancelling its top-rated host.

In the scores of news articles trying to pinpoint why Fox News removed its top-rated host Tucker Carlson on April 24, the prevailing theories have centered on his behavior behind the scenes rather than what Carlson said on air: his off-color texts and internal nose-thumbing toward management; his centrality in a lawsuit filed against the company by one of his former producers; or maybe, some have speculated, it was just a condition of Fox's $787.5 million settlement with Dominion Voting Systems.
The most notable exception has come from 2024 Democratic presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. "Fox fires @TuckerCarlson five days after he crosses the red line by acknowledging that the TV networks pushed a deadly and ineffective vaccine to please their Pharma advertisers," Kennedy, who had appeared during Carlson's final week, tweeted in reaction to the news. "Carlson's breathtakingly courageous April 19 monologue broke TV's two biggest rules: Tucker told the truth about how greedy Pharma advertisers controlled TV news content and he lambasted obsequious newscasters for promoting jabs they knew to be lethal and worthless….Fox just demonstrated the terrifying power of Big Pharma."
Then on May 11, RFK Jr. further "connected some dots" (his phrasing) in an interview with ex-Fox News anchor Megyn Kelly. "What his firing showed," Kennedy posited on Kelly's podcast, "was that the ideology trumps popularity and even revenues, that they were willing to get rid of a guy like that because…he wouldn't follow the narrative."
Kennedy said his "background assumption"—that "if you talk about this on Fox, you're going to get fired"—was based on a conversation with former Fox News chief and longtime personal friend Roger Ailes, back when Ailes was explaining why RFK could not come on the air to promote his 2014 documentary Trace Amounts: Autism, Mercury, and the Hidden Truth.
"'I can't do that for you, Bobby,'" Kennedy recounted, "'because if any of my hosts allow you onto a show without asking my permission, I would have to fire them. And if I didn't fire them, I would get a phone call from Rupert [Murdoch] within 10 minutes.'"
But what do the Fox News archives suggest about a "red line" prohibiting criticism of the pharmaceutical industry? That if there is a rule about bashing Big Pharma, no one's enforcing it.
On May 7, two weeks after Carlson's cancellation, host Steve Hilton of The Next Revolution kicked off a segment titled "America's War on Children" by saying, "We often talk on this program about how Big Pharma corruptly pushes prescription drugs on adults. That's bad enough. But just look at what they're doing to our kids."
This has been a recurring theme for Hilton. In February, he decried "this disgusting [Big Pharma] corruption that's really really hurting—and killing!—Americans." In July 2017, Hilton devoted a "Swamp Watch" segment to drug companies, asking "Who could possibly benefit from us spending more on drugs but not getting any healthier as a result? The pharmaceutical companies, whose main incentive is to sell as many drugs as possible."
Fox has broken RFK's purported "two biggest rules" about pharmaceutical influence and COVID vaccine promotion so often that the progressive watchdog Media Matters for America, in a December 2021 report titled, "Fox News employs its own familiar anti-vaccine tactics to attack COVID booster shots," listed a dozen examples under the subheading "Suggesting boosters are a nefarious plot by Big Pharma to drive up profits."
Tucker Carlson is no stranger to such lists. Long before his April 19 monologue, the populist conservative essayed that "the COVID vaccine is dangerous for kids" (June 2021); that "very serious questions have emerged about some of the most widely prescribed drugs in America, very much including the COVID vaccines" (July 2022); and that Pfizer had the power to engineer "a near-total media blackout" of an unfavorable news story about the vaccine (January 2023).
Back in November 2021, Carlson invited Kennedy to be the main subject of a Fox Nation streaming special titled "Coup de Vax," in which he called RFK "one of the bravest and most impressive people I have ever met," heaping praise on his just-released book, The Real Anthony Fauci: Bill Gates, Big Pharma, and the Global War on Democracy and Public Health. In comments promoting the special on his TV show, Carlson said it was "an exhaustively reported book that I can't recommend strongly enough," written by "one of the smartest and most articulate chroniclers of the erosion of our civil liberties in this country."
By imagining Carlson's firing as proof of Big Pharma's "terrifying power," Kennedy may have missed a more interesting if less lurid story: The leading cable news outlet has been admirably willing to bite the hand of the "fourth-largest spender on TV ads in the country," in a way that reflects the ongoing transformation of conservatism into an ideology far more suspicious of Corporate America.
That process was kicked into gear by Donald Trump, who, as president-elect in 2017, complained that drug companies were "getting away with murder," and as president in 2020, charged that "Big Pharma is taking ads against me because I am MASSIVELY lowering your drug prices, which is obviously not good for them."
RFK Jr., throughout his decades in public life, has repeatedly painted vivid pictures of malevolent actors conspiring to inflict intentional harm for personal profit. In both style and substance, he has more recently been joined by populist conservatives such as Carlson, the leading practitioner of "Trumpism without Trump."
"The other channels took hundreds of millions of dollars from Big Pharma companies and then they [shilled] for their sketchy products on the air," Carlson said in his April 19 monologue before introducing Kennedy. "And as they did that, they maligned anyone who was skeptical of those products. At the very least, this was a moral crime. It was disgusting, but it was universal. It happened across the American news media. They all did it."
Fox declined to comment on its handling of potential conflicts of interest with pharmaceutical companies or the Megyn Kelly interview beyond pointing to its April 24 press release, which said in part: "FOX News Media and Tucker Carlson have agreed to part ways. We thank him for his service to the network as a host and prior to that as a contributor."
Ailes, who was fired by Murdoch in July 2016 amid a flurry of sexual harassment lawsuits, died in May 2017 and thus cannot corroborate Kennedy's claim. In a rare interview with The Daily Beast published Monday, his widow, Elizabeth Ailes, said that Carlson was dismissed for the same reason that her husband and former leading anchor Bill O'Reilly were: Murdoch believed they had become too powerful.
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Slow news day?
For better or worse RFK's shaking up the Democrat's constituencies and the Cathedral won't stand for it. With three hit pieces on him just today here at Reason, I'd guess Charles Koch's concerned.
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Big pharma has nothing to worry about from the Bobby Spotlight if they aren't doing anything wrong. JFK and RFK made the world a better place by waging war on organised crime, let Bobby The Sequel begin!
Oh, hell yes! I am going to believe everything a democrat presidential candidate says.
They never ever lie.
Not even once.
I mean James O'Keefe just released a video of a Fox exec claiming Tucker was fired as part of the settlement with Dominion (at Dominions request) as well as requests from Pharma lobbyists.
Strange how you didn't mention that video in your questions.
Wouldn't that be actionable on Tucker's part?
You mean actionable against Dominion? Tortious interference in his employment contract?
It is. It is the face of his lawsuit to get out of his contract.
Bet he could sue Dominion for contract interference too.
One billion dollars.
I was about to make that same statement.
James O'keefe and his OMG scored another hit.
Someone ain't happy either.
Who is Steve Hilton? Does Rupert Murdoch watch him? Does anyone?
That's sort of the weakest link of Welch's piece. Some nobody at Fox criticizing drug companies in a way that ignores media's collaboration with them isn't exactly the same as the biggest name in cable news calling out the media as the drug companies' willing accomplice. I'm not saying Kennedy or Carlson are right. But, holding this guy out as evidence that Kennedy's claim is wrong just doesn't cut it.
Matt Welch's life has no value.
The metals alone are worth about $0.77, and after drying the flesh can support combustion, so maybe another $0.25?
When RFKJR complains:
Kennedy said his "background assumption"—that "if you talk about this on Fox, you're going to get fired"—was based on a conversation with former Fox News chief and longtime personal friend Roger Ailes, when Ailes was explaining why RFK could not come on the air to promote his 2014 documentary Trace Amounts: Autism, Mercury, and the Hidden Truth.
We need to recall that nothing in that so-called documentary was more than fabrication and innuendo, long since proven wrong. And not every charlatan deserves a hearing on FOX.
RFK has been utterly delusional his entire adult life. So he'll make a pretty good candidate for the party that elected a lifelong liar and corrupt politician, but only after senility set it.
I don't really have an opinion on exactly which thing he'd said against the narrative got him fired, but when the Cathedral announces that it wasn't because he criticized Big Pharma, that tells me it was probably because he criticized Big Pharma.
"Carlson said it was 'an exhaustively reported book that I can't recommend strongly enough,' written by 'one of the smartest and most articulate chroniclers of the erosion of our civil liberties in this country.'"
As I recall, Bobby Kennedy Jr once bragged about never having read a book cover to cover.
"Bobby Kennedy Jr once bragged about never having read a book cover to cover."
He was a heroin addict for 14 years. Cut him some slack. Any depth of character in the man comes no doubt from his love of the outdoors. I think he's sound on the environment and anti-war. That's enough for me. The rest is opera.
RFK jr. is going to meet a lot of strong opposition even from the leftists. The left is infatuated with Fauci, Woke, BLM and ANTIFA.
His critique of Dr. Fauci has created some enemies but also a lot of friends who dislike Fauci with a vengeance. As they should. Fauci is a grifter, a narcissist and possible psychopath. He's killed more people than Dr. Mengele. There is no good reason for this angel of death to be allowed to walk about freely. He should be behind bars awaiting trial and a death sentence.
The more RFK speaks out the more the left shudders convulsively. They can't stop him and unless someone decides to take him out, which is a very real possibility given the character of the government in Washington, he could pose a threat to the ruling class and the left that supports it.
I was very sorry to read about his suicide next week.
RFK Jr. didn't kill himself.
No one ever got fired for extolling the virtues of the French healthcare system!
He's not the only one on the hit-list for questioning our ?"most secure election ever in history?".
There are plenty of theories about what led to Carlson's firing and this is as plausible as any. If Tucker doesn't tell us we'll probably never know for sure.
RFK Jr is a fucking moron.
Tucker got fired for:
(1) costing the network 3-quarters-of-a-billion-dollars in the Dominion suit (with more to come from Smartmatic & other plaintiffs – for which the Dominion suit becomes ‘blood in the water’)
(2) Multiple claims of sexual harassment, which are also headed to litigation
(3) His gaslighting of Ray Epps on 60 minutes… Continuing to promote the idea that Mr Epps was a federal agent/informant, or that Jan 6 was a ‘false flag’ operation provoked by the government is just BEGGING for even more unwinnable defamation suits…
Basically, if you hire Tucker you are begging to stack up piles of expensive lawsuits for defamation & SH. Fox decided the liability wasn’t worth the ratings.
Bet RFK wouldn't give a shit if Tucker was fired for criticising the Climate Alarmist Grifters, he'd be trying to imprison him.
You mean Ray Epps gaslighting of Tucker Carlson on 60 minutes. FIFY.
We can argue why they took him off the air.
They explicitly DID NOT fire him. If they had, they couldn't even try to enforce the non-compete provision in his contract to stop him from moving to another platform.