 The resistance will be SuperChatted. On Friday, former CNN host-turned-YouTuber Don Lemon and independent journalist Georgia Fort were arrested and charged with blocking access to a church and violating the civil rights of parishioners after the duo followed a group of anti-ICE protesters who interrupted a Sunday service in Minneapolis. The move, coupled with the recent seizure of a Washington Post journalist’s electronic devices, amounted to a new but sadly familiar front in the Trump administration’s ongoing war against the media. The reaction followed the same playbook as other moments when President Donald Trump has stepped over the line: Press freedom groups gave the standard strongly-worded condemnations, some media organizations issued warnings, and the media’s critics cheered. Lemon’s actions, and those of his allies in new media, were more interesting. Almost immediately after the news broke Friday morning, Lemon’s livestream was up and running with what became a nine-hour YouTube telethon stream of the new independent media resistance to Trump. The show featured former cable news-hosts-turned-Substackers like Zeteo founder Mehdi Hasan, Jim Acosta, Joy Reid, and Katie Phang. It showcased prominent ex-Republicans and ex-Trump administration officials like Miles Taylor, Olivia Troye, and Tim Miller. It had new Democratic media creators like Jennifer Welch of I’ve Had It and Adam Mockler, political candidates like Texas Rep. Jasmine Crockett, and even Oscar-winning actor Jane Fonda. It was a glimpse into how news media works now: With Lemon in jail and incommunicado, his team kept the action going. The stream racked up 717,000 views, and many who watched chipped in by becoming paying members of Lemon’s YouTube community via the Super Chat monetization function. In the end, Lemon gained several thousand new YouTube subscribers, and his videos have seen a significant boost in viewership in the days since he was arrested. Lemon came on Semafor’s Mixed Signals last year to explain his forced transition from cable news anchor to YouTuber, and now has the unfortunate honor of being our first podcast guest to be charged with a federal crime (that we know of). At the time, he said he was on track to make more money on YouTube than he did as a cable host. He acknowledged he wasn’t there yet, and it may be a while. But by the perverse new media incentives, his enemies in the Trump administration may have just gotten him a bit closer. Also today: Behind the scenes of another mutually beneficial media feud between the California Post and Gov. Gavin Newsom, and an interview with the TV executive behind Heated Rivalry. |