January 17, 2016

Britons mock and panic as fake Qatari Channel Al Jazeera America Closes shop


Low GAS price closes Al Jazeera America

Indirectly means Mehdi Hasan coming back to UK




British Twitter users were in full panic/mockery mode last night as the news emerged that Al Jazeera is closing its American operation “in light of the economic challenges in the U.S. media marketplace”.

The channel, hiply nicknamed “AJAM” recruited what is considered top talent upon launch, giving the British public reprieve from the incessantly inane Mehdi Hasan, previously the “Political Director” of the Huffington Post UK.

Mr. Hasan – with his history of promoting Islamic supremacism, making self-contradictory statements about the Daily Mail newspaper, and embarking on socialist rants on UK television – may now return to the United Kingdom, as his work visa would be predicated on his employment.

But in addition to his work for Al Jazeera America, he also works for Al Jazeera English based out of Washington, D.C. So there is a good chance he may stay put.

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The Al Jazeera America cable news network said Wednesday it will shut down two and a half years after its launch, a victim of a rough business environment and political headwinds it could not conquer.

The channel, an offshoot of the Qatar-based Al Jazeera cable network, had trouble persuading cable and satellite companies to carry it, and viewers to watch. It failed despite a promise to offer serious-minded journalism and some award-winning work.

The cable network will shut down on April 30. It launched in October 2013.
Al Anstey, CEO of Al Jazeera America, said the economic climate for media forced the decision. “Al Jazeera America is committed to conducting this process in a way that is consistent with its respect for colleagues,” Anstey said.

Al Jazeera will expand its international digital news operations so they will be available in the US, Anstey said, adding that details will be available in the next few months.
“I’m not sure it was inevitable, but it’s certainly not surprising,” said Philip Seib, a University of Southern California journalism professor and author of the book “The Al Jazeera Effect.” “In the news environment today there is so much competition that it is virtually impossible for a new company to get any traction.”

Anstey had taken over last spring after the news network’s CEO, Ehab Al Shihabi, was dismissed. The company was the target of lawsuits from former employees who had complained about a culture of fear, and anti-Semitic and sexist behavior among executives.

Al Jazeera also could not overcome suspicion among some potential viewers about its motives bred in the years after the 2001 terrorist attacks.

Last month, Al Jazeera America was honored with an Alfred I. duPont-Columbia University journalism award for a documentary that depicted the lives of working class Americans.

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