Dave Portnoy explains why young Americans don’t trust the media

Founder Bartolol Sports Dave Portnoy He believes that he has built enough confidence with his loyal fans that he could build powerful and successful news because so many Americans simply have no faith in the main newspaper organization.
“Everything is in confidence and I don’t think a lot of young people believe in traditional media, and they trust someone like me because I’ve been talking to them for 20 years,” Portnoy said Fox News Digital.
Trump’s administration offers a wounded place in James S. Brady Brifing Room for “New Media Votes that produce news -related content” and Jack Mac Mac Bartol figure He expressed interest Joining the printing house in the White House and Portnoy seems on board with the concept.
“I think there is a place to do this, that the younger generation consumes news from a very different type of person,” Portnoy said.
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The founder of Bartol Sports Dave Portnoy believes that he built enough confidence with his audience that he could build news that covered the White House.
Portnoy said the White House is moving to new media, announced in January by the print secretary of Caroline Leavitt, opened new ways to Americans to consume information without leaning on newspapers or television.
“There are a million ways to get it,” he said.
“Facebook, Instagram, Tictok, all new ones and people just consume the media much differently than they used to be,” he continued. “And I don’t know that the main media really caught it.”
Portnoy, who interviewed the President Trump in the White House in the White House in the White House in 2020, noted that people often try to paint Bartol as a political platform. Although he could not pass the “superior” opportunity to sit with the president in the ugly garden, Portnoy believes that the company was mostly left out of politics.
“We still think somehow the place of comedy, sometimes more serious, sometimes not,” he said.
AND New York Times Magazine He recently released a long -lasting feature on Portnoy, “How” Manuspher “became a mainstream party,” which he said was “Portnoy” long abused as a toxic guy “, but still creates millions of attitudes for his often viral pizza examinations.
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The New York Times magazine has recently set the popularity of frequent-viral pizza reviews in Dave Portnoy. ((Photo Tom Briglia/ Getty Images))
Negative terms are nothing new for Portnoy, which has been in public for almost 20 years and launched Bartolol as a “gamble and sport” newspaper, which he distributed around Boston in 2003.
“Manusphere, brother Culture, all these things, we heard a lot. So it certainly didn’t surprise me that they used it that way. I think it’s really like a simplified way of looking at Bartol and what we did, but it’s certainly not the first time I heard it,” Portnoy said.
Portnoy believes that the piece, which he is “long treated as an avatar for everything that elite media is not,” supports the idea that it is probably enough for him to launch a news organization one day.
“In a strange way, [the Times] He explained why people like me. It’s like they followed me, not just pizza. I have been doing Bartol for two decades and they have seen me speak and talk and react to everything. It’s the trust I have, “Portnoy said before criticizing Willy Staley, who wrote the story.
“He simply says it like an external one, like,” Oh, here’s this pizza thing that, you know, is actually somehow interesting, and he’s not the person I thought he was, “and then he’s in the next sentence like,” but he’s a jerk, “Portnoy said.” But you actually say when you look at me, you don’t think I’m jerk, you just say I’m a jerk about something in your newspaper. “
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Trump’s administration offers a wounded place in the James S. Brady Printing Room for “New Media Votes that produce news -related content.” (Samuel Corum/Politico/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
Portnoy does not think that the news consumer should know exactly what the publication will say about a person based solely on the socket, but a piece of New York Times magazine is the latest example that this is true.
“That’s why people don’t believe that,” he said.
He suggested that journalists who paint it with a negative light would be wrong “like 50% of the time” if they were grilled where it really was on key issues.
“Why would you trust anyone if you already know what to think, regardless of the problem, before you even ask the question?” Said Portnoy.
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The New York Times did not immediately respond to the comment request.