Rupert Murdoch Is Bringing New York Snark West—And California Should Be Worried
Los Angeles is about to get a loud, glossy, outrage-fueled new houseguest, and nobody asked for it. Rupert Murdoch, the octogenarian king of tabloid bombast, is exporting the New York Post playbook to the West Coast with a shiny new venture: The California Post. Think oversized headlines, breathless scandal coverage, wall-to-wall photos, and a sneer disguised as “common sense.” What could possibly go wrong?
This isn’t journalism expanding its reach. It’s a brand invasion, one that treats California not as a complex state of 40 million people, but as a stage set for outrage, celebrity meltdowns, and culture-war clickbait.
A Venerable Tabloid, Now With Palm Trees
The New York Post has always been unapologetically tabloid. Smaller format. Bigger fonts. Short attention spans. Crime, celebrities, sex scandals, sports hysteria, and punchline headlines that scream from the newsstand like a carnival barker. Depth was never the point—impact was.
For decades, the Post occupied a clear lane: center-right, populist, blunt to the point of parody. Love it or hate it, it knew exactly what it was. Now Murdoch wants to transplant that DNA into Los Angeles, a city already drowning in performative media noise, collapsing local journalism, and algorithm-driven outrage.
Calling this a “news desert solution” feels like a bad joke. Dropping a tabloid into a civic vacuum doesn’t restore journalism. It just fills the silence with yelling.
Sensationalism As Strategy, Not Accident
Let’s be honest: the California experiment isn’t about “stories being untold.” It’s about stories being told loudly, angrily, and with maximum visual stimulus. Eye-catching front pages aren’t a byproduct—they’re the business model. Sensationalism isn’t a flaw—it’s the feature.
Short articles mean fewer facts to check. Heavy photos mean less nuance required. Provocative headlines mean the social media machine does the distribution for free. This is journalism optimized for outrage metrics, not civic understanding.
Los Angeles doesn’t lack media. It lacks trust. And tabloid theatrics don’t rebuild that, they erode it further.
Can Murdoch’s Spawn Go Liberal?
Here’s the twist Murdoch-watchers can’t ignore: California isn’t New York. It’s not even close. A hard-edged, center-right tabloid voice may play in Manhattan bodegas, but Los Angeles is a different beast. Which raises the obvious question: will Murdoch’s media offspring—and their increasingly California-influenced leadership circles—try to soften the edge?
Will the California Post suddenly discover progressive compassion? Will celebrity-friendly coverage morph into ideological flexibility? Or will it slap a “liberal-ish” gloss on the same old outrage engine, hoping palm trees and progressive buzzwords can disguise a familiar agenda?
If history is any guide, the spin may change, but the instincts won’t. Murdoch properties don’t abandon power narratives—they repackage them.
Local Journalism Or Cultural Colonization?
Positioning this venture as a gift to Californians is insulting. Los Angeles doesn’t need a New York tabloid to “explain” it. What it needs is investment in investigative reporting, community coverage, and journalism that isn’t allergic to complexity.
Instead, California gets a Murdoch-branded megaphone promising “fearless” coverage while quietly importing an editorial sensibility shaped thousands of miles away. That’s not local journalism. That’s cultural colonization with better graphics.
Bottom Line
The California Post isn’t coming to save Los Angeles journalism—it’s coming to monetize its dysfunction. This is tabloid logic masquerading as civic duty, sensationalism dressed up as accountability, and a legacy media brand gambling that outrage travels well across time zones. California deserves better than recycled snark with a West Coast filter. Whether readers reward this experiment or reject it outright will say a lot about where American media—and public trust—are headed next.
We are so screwed.
— Steve