Jonah Goldberg is not just looking for a fight. He's hoping for a “big, internal, honking fight” to revive the Republican Party, and to fuel the high-profile new media outlet he announced last month with Steve Hayes, a former editor-in-chief of the Review's long-time rival, The Weekly Standard, to form a new conservative media company.
Goldberg's venture is notable in part because he's in it, one of the few sought-out, reasonable voices in media today. But it's also worth watching because of Goldberg's vow to break through the siloes much of journalism now finds itself in. The new outlet, he says, will steer away from fan service when it launches this summer. “So much news we see, the audience already agrees with what they're reading, and they want to be right,” he says. Goldberg plans to challenge the groupthink that he sees accompany “across the ideological spectrum” with “breaking political and cultural firestorms,” like the Covington kids or the Kavanaugh hearings. “If a tulip bulb mania were to break out, we want to be the place that explains both why it's happening and why you shouldn't sell your house to buy more tulips.”
Read Full Article »