Gemini says: In his book, Bonfire of the Murdochs: How the Epic Fight to Control the Last Great Media Dynasty Broke a Family –– and the World, Gabriel Sherman focuses his gaze on the decline of the Murdoch empire because the elite professional class requires a narrative of collapse. His book serves as a map for those who view the Murdoch influence as a fever that must break. The text uses the family’s internal discord as evidence of a broader moral rot, which validates the worldviews of Sherman’s peers in Manhattan and London. These readers do not want a balanced look at media consolidation. They want a post-mortem of a monster.
The narrative structure suggests that the Murdoch family’s power is an anomaly that proper society must correct. Sherman treats the rise of Fox News and the influence over British tabloids not as a series of successful business maneuvers but as a breach of social contract. This framing reinforces the status of the journalist as a gatekeeper of public decency. By casting the family drama as a bonfire, Sherman implies that the flames consume not just the heirs but the very foundations of the old media order.
The demand for such books increases as traditional institutions feel their grip on the narrative slip. When a writer like Sherman dissects a family like the Murdochs, he performs a service for the institutional left and the managerial elite. He provides them with the vocabulary to dismiss Murdoch’s populist reach as mere psychological dysfunction among his children. This reduces a massive political and cultural shift to a simple case of bad parenting and greed.
Sherman frames Lachlan as the heir who chose the fortress. He depicts the ideological split between the siblings as a battle for the soul of the West, but he focuses most of his energy on the friction between Lachlan and James. James represents the globalist, credentialed world that Sherman inhabits. When Sherman writes about James, he uses a tone of mourning for a lost ally. He views James as the Murdoch who could have redeemed the brand by aligning it with the environmental and social goals of the professional-managerial class.
Lachlan receives the opposite treatment. Sherman casts him as the son who doubled down on the populist, nationalist streak that the New York elite loathes. This creates a binary where one sibling is the agent of progress and the other is the guardian of the old, toxic order. Sherman does not see Lachlan’s strategy as a rational business choice to maintain a loyal audience. He sees it as an act of defiance against the very moral boundaries the book seeks to enforce.
This sibling rivalry serves as a proxy for the larger cultural war. By painting Lachlan as a captive to his father’s worst impulses, Sherman removes any nuance from the conservative media strategy. He presents the shift toward more aggressive right-wing rhetoric as a personal failing rather than a response to a changing market. This allows the reader to believe that if only a different sibling had won, the media landscape would return to its proper, vetted state.
The book treats the ideological leanings of the heirs as symptoms of their respective psychological wounds. Sherman suggests that their political stances are mere reactions to their father’s approval or lack thereof. This reduces complex political movements to the level of a family therapy session. It satisfies the elite reader’s desire to see populist media as a product of individual pathology rather than a widespread social demand.
In the context of Gabriel Sherman’s analysis, applying Alliance Theory to the Murdoch succession turns a corporate legal battle into a study of competing social ecosystems. Alliance Theory suggests that kinship is not just about blood descent but about the strategic exchanges and affinities that bind a family to a larger social structure. For the Murdochs, the battle between Lachlan and James was never just about who managed the ledger. It was a choice between two incompatible alliances.
Rupert Murdoch’s recent move to amend the family trust in Nevada—often referred to as Project Family Harmony—was a tactical strike to preserve a specific alliance. By seeking to give Lachlan permanent control, Rupert attempted to lock the empire into a coalition with populist politics, mass audiences, and nationalist capital. In Alliance Theory terms, this is an act of closure. Rupert recognized that the “democracy” he originally built into the trust, where his four eldest children shared power, would lead to a “contamination” of his life’s work. He saw that if James, Elisabeth, and Prudence held power, they would inevitably trade the family’s populist influence for the approval of the professional-managerial elite.
James Murdoch represents the “out-group” alliance. His departure from the board and his public criticism of Fox News were signals to the credentialed class that he shared their moral boundaries. From an Alliance Theory perspective, James was attempting to exchange his Murdoch “blood” for a higher status within the global elite coalition—the world of Davos, climate activism, and prestige media. To Rupert and Lachlan, this looked like a betrayal because it threatened the core identity of the business. They viewed James’s preferred alliance as a threat that would dilute the “purity” of the Murdoch brand.
Lachlan’s victory is the triumph of the internal alliance. By siding with his father’s ideological vision, Lachlan secured his position as the “safe” heir who would not dismantle the fortress. The legal settlement, which effectively sidelined the more liberal siblings with multi-billion-dollar payouts, serves as a formal boundary. The siblings were given the capital to thrive in their own preferred social circles, but they were stripped of the voting power to influence the Murdoch core. This is a classic structuralist outcome: the family remains wealthy, but the functional alliance is preserved by excluding those who would change its nature.
This split confirms that in high-stakes dynasties, the most dangerous threats do not come from external competitors but from family members who seek membership in a rival alliance. Sherman’s book suggests that the Murdochs did not just break their family; they demonstrated that at a certain level of power, you cannot belong to two worlds at once. You must choose which alliance to feed and which one to burn.
In the Nevada probate battle, Rupert Murdoch attempted to use the legal concept of “good faith” as a strategic tool to preserve his alliance with populist power. Alliance Theory suggests that a group remains stable only if its members share a unified mission and exclude those who might divert its resources to a rival coalition. Rupert’s legal team argued that the Murdoch Family Trust, which originally granted equal voting power to the four eldest children, faced a “commercial threat” due to ideological drift. They claimed that James, Elisabeth, and Prudence had become “politically moderate” or aligned with progressive causes. According to Rupert’s argument, if these siblings took control, they would inevitably shift the editorial direction of Fox News away from its conservative base.
This shift would destroy the “commercial value” of the empire because that value depends entirely on its alliance with a specific, mass-market audience. Rupert and Lachlan sought to “decant” the trust—essentially pouring the assets into a new legal structure—that would give Lachlan sole voting control. They framed this not as a personal preference but as a fiduciary duty to protect the wealth of all beneficiaries. By their logic, a more liberal Fox News is a bankrupt Fox News. They argued that Lachlan is the only heir who remains loyal to the original alliance that built the dynasty.
The opposing siblings viewed this as a breach of the original family contract. They argued that the trust was irrevocable and that Rupert’s attempt to change the rules was a “carefully crafted charade” designed only to entrench Lachlan. In December 2024, a Nevada probate commissioner agreed with the siblings. The commissioner ruled that Rupert and Lachlan had acted in “bad faith,” finding that the proposed changes did not benefit all the heirs but instead served the narrow interests of one branch of the family. The court emphasized that the “material purpose” of the trust was equal distribution, not the preservation of a specific political brand.
The litigation has continued into 2026, with major disputes over how much of the case should remain secret. The Nevada Supreme Court recently ruled that the lower court erred by sealing the entire proceeding, noting that the public has a significant interest in a case that controls a “political news conglomerate.” This transparency threatens the very thing Rupert sought by moving the trust to Nevada: a quiet, private realignment of power. While Lachlan currently runs the companies, the legal reality remains that he will eventually have to share power with siblings who do not share his vision. The family is trapped in a structure that forces them to remain in an alliance they no longer agree on.
In the world of the television series Succession, Alliance Theory functions as the primary mechanism for survival within the Roy family. The show portrays a series of failed exchanges where characters attempt to trade emotional loyalty for institutional power. Unlike a functional kinship system where bonds create stability, the Roy siblings exist in a state of permanent competition because their father, Logan, intentionally prevents them from forming a stable coalition with anyone other than himself.
Logan Roy operates as the sovereign who defines the moral and strategic boundaries of his kingdom. He treats his children as assets rather than heirs. In Alliance Theory, a gift usually creates a debt that strengthens a bond. In Logan’s world, every gift—a high-level job, a cover-up for a crime, or a vote of confidence—is a trap designed to ensure subordination. He understands that if Kendall, Roman, and Shiv ever formed a true alliance, his own power would vanish. Therefore, he ensures that the siblings view each other as rival “out-groups.” Every time the children attempt to unite, Logan identifies the weakest link and offers them a private exchange that requires the betrayal of the others.
Kendall Roy represents the tragic attempt to build a rival alliance outside the family fortress. Throughout the series, he tries to align himself with the professional-managerial class—the “virtue-signaling” world of tech startups, philanthropic circles, and credentialed media. He adopts their vocabulary and their moral posturing to signal that he is a “safe” alternative to his father. However, the elite coalition he seeks to join never fully accepts him. They view his Murdoch-style background as a moral pollutant. Kendall’s failure stems from his inability to realize that he cannot use his father’s capital to buy entry into a group that defines itself by its opposition to that very capital.
Shiv Roy attempts a different strategy by acting as a bridge between the family and the political establishment. Her initial alliance with Gil Eavis, a democratic socialist based on figures like Bernie Sanders, is a classic study in boundary crossing. She uses her Roy proximity to give Gil credibility and uses Gil’s “purity” to wash the Roy name off herself. This works until the internal family gravity pulls her back. Once she enters the succession race, she loses her external status. She finds herself trapped in a system where her gender and her father’s whims make her an eternal outsider, unable to command the respect of the populist base or the elite liberals.
The final season culminates in a total breakdown of kinship alliances in favor of corporate consolidation. The GoJo deal represents the ultimate “invasion” by a foreign alliance led by Lukas Matsson. Alliance Theory predicts that when an internal system becomes too fractured and toxic to defend its borders, it will be absorbed by a more cohesive external force. In the end, the siblings choose to destroy each other rather than let any one of them succeed. Tom Wambsgans emerges as the winner because he understands the fundamental rule of Logan’s alliance: total, ego-less submission. He accepts his role as a functional tool for the new regime, proving that in a world of warring dynasties, the most adaptable survivor is the one who belongs to no one and serves whoever holds the seal.
The idea that the public acts as a passive vessel for media messaging ignores the evolutionary reality of social intelligence. We did not evolve to accept every signal we receive because doing so would make us easy prey for manipulation. Instead, humans developed what evolutionary psychologists call epistemic vigilance. This is a suite of cognitive mechanisms designed to filter information. We constantly evaluate the source of a claim for competence and honesty. If a journalist or an intellectual belongs to a group that has previously misled us or demonstrated a clear bias against our interests, we instinctively discount their information.
In Alliance Theory, the “public” is not a monolith but a collection of competing coalitions. When an elite class claims it tells people what to think, it confuses its influence over its own peer group with influence over the wider population. Within the professional-managerial alliance, there is indeed a high degree of conformity because the costs of dissent—social ostracization and loss of status—are high. For those outside that alliance, however, the “preaching” you noticed in Sherman’s book acts as a signal of a hostile out-group. Rather than being convinced by the message, the reader becomes more defensive.
Propaganda usually fails when the messenger tries to bridge a gap between two groups that do not trust each other. We are naturally skeptical of “altruistic” information from strangers. If a media dynasty or a high-status journalist tells a working-class audience how to vote or what to value, the audience looks for the hidden exchange. They ask what the journalist stands to gain. Often, the gain is simply status within the journalist’s own elite circles. The audience senses they are being used as a “sacrificial object” to prove the writer’s moral purity.
The breakdown in modern media trust reflects a failure of these elites to account for our evolved skepticism. They rely on the assumption that their credentials—degrees, titles, and institutional backing—serve as universal proofs of truth. But credentials only work as signals within an alliance that agrees on their value. To someone outside that alliance, a New York Times byline or a Harvard degree might be a signal of contamination rather than a badge of authority.
When you sense “preaching,” your brain is flagging a mismatched alliance. The writer is not trying to cooperate with you; they are trying to demonstrate their loyalty to a group you do not belong to. We are not gullible; we are highly attuned to the social geography of who is trying to sell us what.
Sherman uses a specific lexicon to signal his membership in the credentialed elite. He avoids the language of business strategy or market demand and instead leans on words like “corrosive,” “toxic,” and “instability.” These terms do not describe financial performance; they describe a moral state. By using these descriptors, he signals to his peers that he shares their disgust. He positions the Murdoch empire as a biological or environmental hazard rather than a competing media model. This framing allows his readers to feel a sense of shared superiority. They are the clean ones observing the moral pollution.
The book frequently employs the “preaching” you noticed through the use of high-status adjectives that frame every Murdoch victory as a failure of civilization. When he describes the rise of a certain news program or a political endorsement, he does not analyze its popularity. He analyzes the “damage” it does to the “social fabric.” The phrase “social fabric” is a common badge among the professional-managerial alliance. It implies a specific, managed version of society that they control. Anyone who disrupts that fabric is not just a competitor; they are an enemy of the collective good.
Sherman also uses the technique of “psychologizing” his subjects to diminish their agency. He interprets the actions of Rupert and his children through the lens of trauma and dysfunction. While this makes for a compelling narrative, it serves a deeper function in Alliance Theory. By treating their political influence as a byproduct of a “broken” family, he avoids the uncomfortable reality that millions of people actually want what the Murdochs sell. He reduces a massive cultural shift to a series of personal pathologies. This protects the elite reader from having to engage with the ideas of the Murdoch audience. It keeps the “out-group” safely dismissed as people manipulated by a sick family.
The choice of title, Bonfire of the Murdochs, acts as the ultimate signal. It references the historic “Bonfire of the Vanities,” where objects of sin were publicly burned to purify a city. Sherman is telling his audience that this book is not just a biography. It is a ritual. He is casting the Murdochs into the fire so that the prestige institutions he represents can feel cleansed. The publisher, Simon & Schuster, reinforces this by marketing the book as a definitive exposure of “danger.” They are selling a status document that confirms the reader is on the right side of the moral boundary.
Sherman draws a sharp line between those who remain within the Murdoch alliance and those who defect. He treats the journalists who stay—the loyalists—not as professionals with a different worldview but as compromised agents who have traded their integrity for access or money. In the logic of Alliance Theory, Sherman views these individuals as having accepted a “polluted” exchange. By remaining inside the tent, they signal their rejection of the prestige media coalition’s moral boundaries. Sherman’s prose often suggests that their work is not journalism but a form of weaponry used to protect the dynasty’s interests.
When Sherman writes about defectors like Chris Wallace or former executives who have distanced themselves from Fox News, the tone shifts dramatically. He welcomes them back into the fold of the credentialed elite. These figures have performed the necessary ritual of disavowal. By leaving the Murdoch empire and speaking out against its influence, they signal their return to the “correct” side of the moral boundary. Sherman treats their exit as a moment of clarity or redemption. In his narrative, they are no longer moral pollutants; they are survivors who have escaped a toxic ecosystem.
This binary reinforces the idea that there is only one legitimate form of journalism—what Sherman calls “capital J” journalism. He explicitly contrasts this with Rupert Murdoch’s view of the craft, which Murdoch sees as a tool for influence and profit. By aligning himself with the standards of the Columbia Journalism School and prestige New York publications, Sherman tells his readers that anyone outside this specific alliance is not just a rival but a threat to truth itself. He uses the stories of defectors to prove that even those inside the empire eventually recognize its inherent “wrongness.”
This approach serves to police the boundaries of the professional-managerial class. It tells other journalists that the only path to respectability and status is through opposition to the Murdoch alliance. Those who stay are cast as part of a “monster” that Sherman claims Rupert can no longer control. Those who leave are granted a seat at the table of the enlightened. The book functions as an invitation to current Murdoch employees: perform the ritual of departure, and the elite coalition will wash away the contamination of your service.
Sherman views new media figures who bypass traditional gatekeepers as a secondary infection resulting from the primary Murdoch wound. He does not treat independent creators or populist influencers as a natural evolution of technology or a response to a narrow media consensus. Instead, he frames them as a chaotic outgrowth of the same “unclean” energy that fueled Fox News. In the narrative of the professional-managerial alliance, these figures represent the final collapse of the gatekeeper system that Sherman and his peers work to maintain.
The book treats the rise of figures like Tucker Carlson in his post-Fox era or the growth of independent digital platforms as a form of social breakdown. Sherman suggests that by removing the layers of corporate and institutional vetting, these figures have removed the “safety valves” of society. He views the direct relationship between a creator and a mass audience as a danger because it exists outside the control of the credentialed class. To Sherman, this is not a democratization of information; it is the abandonment of the moral boundaries that keep the “out-group” at bay.
Alliance Theory predicts this reaction because new media figures directly threaten the status of the “expert” class. If an audience can find information and community without the approval of a prestige editor or a peer-reviewed academic, the social capital of those institutions vanishes. Sherman’s prose reflects this anxiety by focusing on the “disinformation” and “radicalization” he associates with these new channels. He portrays them as the heirs to the Murdoch legacy of disruption, but without the even minimal constraints of traditional corporate lawyers or advertising departments.
This framing allows Sherman to dismiss the appeal of new media as a psychological manipulation of a gullible public. He avoids the idea that people seek out these figures because the traditional media alliance has failed to address their concerns. By casting new media as a corrosive force, he reinforces the necessity of his own class. The book argues that without the gatekeepers Sherman represents, the world descends into the “bonfire” of the title. He presents the elite professional class as the only thing standing between a stable civilization and a digital wilderness of uncontrolled populist energy.
Sherman portrays the transition from Murdoch to Musk as a descent from a structured, if aggressive, media order into a state of digital lawlessness. In his view, Rupert Murdoch was the last of the “press barons”—a man who, for all his disruption, still operated within the recognizable boundaries of corporate law, political favors, and a professionalized (if biased) newsroom. Sherman frames Murdoch as a figure who at least paid lip service to the standards of the fourth estate. He sees Elon Musk, by contrast, as a “big tech bro” who has dismantled the gatekeeper system entirely.
Applying Alliance Theory, Sherman identifies a shift in how power is signaled and maintained. Murdoch’s alliance was built on “The Iron Triangle”: a symbiotic relationship between media corporations, political leaders, and a mass audience. This system was predictable. It relied on back-door meetings and quiet influence. Sherman views Musk’s alliance as far more volatile because it is centered on a cult of personality and a direct, unmediated connection to a digital “out-group.” While Murdoch used his papers to influence the state, Sherman argues that Musk uses his platform to hack it.
The book depicts Musk as a figure who has moved beyond the need for a “wafer-thin veil of journalism.” Sherman notes that while Murdoch felt a degree of shame or at least a need for secrecy during his scandals, Musk leans into confrontation. This is a move from a “small government” libertarianism to what Sherman implies is a form of lawlessness. In this framing, Murdoch is the “monster” who is at least contained by a board of directors and a legacy, while Musk is the “trillionaire” who operates under no rules but his own. This creates a deep anxiety for the professional-managerial class, as their traditional tools for policing behavior—reputational vetting and institutional pressure—have no effect on Musk.
Sherman also compares the two along the lines of “pre-emptive submission.” He suggests that Murdoch’s editors knew what to do without being told, which allowed the empire to function with a degree of internal discipline. He sees Musk as having elevated this to a level of “flagrance,” where the owner’s whims are immediately reflected in the algorithm and the public square. For Sherman, the Murdochs are a “dying dynasty” being eclipsed by “ascendant tech dynasties” like those of Musk or the Ellisons. He views this not as a simple change in leadership but as the final destruction of the media ecosystem that gave journalists like him their status.
Sherman treats the rise of Elon Musk as the fulfillment of a process that Rupert Murdoch merely started. In the book, he suggests that Murdoch created a “monster” of populist energy that has now slipped from his grasp and found a new, more efficient host in Musk. For Sherman, the upcoming 2026 midterm elections represent a critical threshold where the old guard of media influence—the newspapers and cable networks—is being rendered obsolete by the raw, unmediated power of X.
Applying Alliance Theory, Sherman identifies a terrifying shift for the professional-managerial class. Murdoch, for all his disruption, still shared a common language with the elite; he cared about corporate stability, profit, and a recognizable form of political exchange. Musk, in Sherman’s view, represents an alliance with “pure disruption.” The book argues that while Murdoch used Fox News to nudge the political needle, Musk uses his platform to rebuild the entire compass. Sherman views Musk’s involvement in the 2026 cycle not as an attempt to win an argument, but as an attempt to dismantle the consensus-building mechanisms of the state itself.
Sherman expresses deep anxiety over Musk’s ability to bypass traditional fact-checking and gatekeeping. He sees the 2026 midterms as the first major test of a world where “truth” is determined by algorithmic reach rather than institutional vetting. In his narrative, Murdoch was a gardener who pruned the news to suit his interests, but Musk is a fire that clears the forest entirely. This shift threatens the very foundation of Sherman’s alliance, which relies on the idea that certain voices and credentials must remain central to the democratic process.
The book posits that the Murdoch dynasty is “living in a world run by Trump,” a world they helped create but can no longer govern. Sherman suggests that Musk has effectively “stolen the fire” from the Murdochs. He frames Musk as a figure who does not need the “capital J” journalism that Sherman defends. By the 2026 elections, Sherman fears that the transition will be complete: the media will no longer be a series of institutions trying to persuade the public, but a series of platforms used to mobilize them.
In Sherman’s view, the survival of the modern journalist depends on their ability to perform what Alliance Theory identifies as a “ritual of disavowal.” This is not a one-time act but a continuous series of signals that prove the journalist remains untainted by the “pollutant” of populist media. To survive in the landscape of the 2026 midterms, Sherman suggests that reporters must constantly demonstrate that they are not just observers of the Murdoch or Musk empires, but active participants in the resistance against them.
The first ritual is the rejection of neutrality. Sherman argues that in a polarized environment, silence or objectivity is read by the elite professional class as a lack of moral clarity. A journalist must include cues in their work that explicitly distance themselves from the subjects they cover. This might involve framing a successful business strategy as a “threat to democracy” or describing a populist movement as “toxic.” These are badges of membership. By using this language, the journalist tells their peers, “I am one of you; I recognize the danger.”
The second ritual involves the strategic use of sources. Alliance Theory suggests that who you talk to defines who you are. Sherman implies that a “clean” journalist should prioritize sources who have already defected from the Murdoch or Musk orbits. These defectors act as “redemption witnesses” who validate the journalist’s own moral standing. To cite an internal loyalist without a heavy layer of critical framing is to risk social sanction within the prestige media coalition. The journalist must show that they only engage with the “out-group” to expose its dysfunction, never to humanize its motives.
The third ritual is the performance of institutional loyalty. As the 2026 election approaches, Sherman believes journalists must double down on their alignment with “capital J” journalism. This means emphasizing credentials, peer review, and institutional backing as the only legitimate sources of truth. By doing so, they create a defensive wall around their own status. They signal that while Musk or the Murdochs might have the reach, only the credentialed alliance has the “moral authority” to interpret the world.
For Sherman, these rituals are a matter of professional life and death. He views the new media landscape as a “bonfire” that will consume anyone who does not have the protective covering of an elite coalition. The journalist who tries to stand alone, or who treats the “unclean” with too much sympathy, will find themselves cast out of the institutions that provide their livelihood. In this high-stakes social geography, disavowal is the only currency that still holds its value.
In his recent interviews, Sherman frames neutrality not as a virtue, but as a luxury that the modern media can no longer afford. He argues that the era of the “neutral observer” died when the gatekeepers lost control of the narrative. To Sherman, a journalist who remains neutral in the face of the Murdoch or Musk influence is essentially aiding in the destruction of “capital J” journalism. He characterizes the standard of objectivity as a tool that was used when everyone agreed on the same set of facts. Now that the world has split into competing alliances, he believes neutrality looks like complicity.
Sherman explicitly contrasts his own method with the traditional training provided by institutions like the Columbia Journalism School. He notes that while those schools teach journalism as a public service, Rupert Murdoch and Elon Musk view it as a weapon. Sherman suggests that if journalists do not treat their own work with the same strategic intensity, they will be outmatched. In his 2026 conversations, he often uses the metaphor of a war to describe the media landscape. He believes that every story must now serve as a defensive strike for the professional-managerial class.
This rejection of neutrality is a signal to his peers that he understands the stakes of the current cultural conflict. By calling out “neutral” reporting, he performs a ritual of boundary enforcement. He tells his audience that there is no middle ground between the “truth” and the “monster” he believes the Murdochs created. This approach ensures that his work is read not just as a book, but as a manual for ideological survival. He encourages his fellow journalists to embrace their role as active defenders of the institutional order.
The result is a media environment where every report is expected to carry a moral weight. Sherman argues that the public no longer wants or trusts a neutral voice. He believes that readers are looking for clarity and alignment. By providing this, he solidifies his own position within the elite coalition. He positions himself as a writer who is brave enough to “preach” because he believes the situation is dire enough to require it.
Sherman anticipates a future where political reporting functions as a formal branch of the professional-managerial alliance rather than a detached chronicle of events. He sees the abandonment of neutrality as an evolutionary necessity because the traditional gatekeeper model has failed to contain populist movements. In this new paradigm, the journalist becomes a high-status cleric whose primary duty is to translate the complexities of power into moral categories for an aligned audience. Sherman suggests that reporting will increasingly resemble a legal brief or a religious tract, where the conclusion is settled before the investigation begins.
This shift transforms political reporting into a perpetual cycle of boundary maintenance. Sherman believes that as journalists drop the pretense of objectivity, they will focus exclusively on the “internal war” of the elite. This means reporting on the Murdochs or Musk will center on how their actions threaten the stability of the credentialed class. He views this as a defensive consolidation. If the media can no longer persuade a mass audience, it must instead solidify the resolve and shared identity of its own coalition. The goal is to ensure that the institutional “in-group” remains intellectually and morally unified against a chaotic “out-group.”
The disappearance of the neutral model creates a media landscape of total symmetry. Sherman recognizes that if his side abandons the “view from nowhere,” the opposition will feel justified in doing the same. He expects a future defined by competing information silos where every fact is immediately vetted for its alliance value. In Sherman’s view, the role of the 2026 political reporter is to act as a scout who identifies “moral contaminants” and warns the alliance before they can spread. He accepts that this creates a narrower, more parochial media, but he argues that this is the only way to protect the “social fabric” from total unraveling.
The book implies that the end of neutrality marks the end of a certain kind of national conversation. Sherman describes a world where political reporting is no longer a shared arena but a collection of fortified camps. He views this with a sense of grim realism, suggesting that the “bonfire” has already consumed the middle ground. For Sherman, the future belongs to those who can most effectively weaponize their reporting to preserve their status and their coalition’s influence. He views the survival of his class as more important than the preservation of a legacy standard that he believes has already been hollowed out.
ChatGPT says: Elite contempt for “alternative facts” makes clean sense under Alliance Theory.
At bottom, facts are not just truth claims. They are alliance signals. To accept a fact is to accept the authority of the institution that certified it. Universities, legacy media, courts, credentialed experts. When someone says “alternative facts,” they are not merely disputing evidence. They are rejecting the coalition that decides what counts as evidence.
From an alliance perspective, this is a direct status threat. Elites do not experience alternative facts as an epistemic disagreement. They experience them as insubordination. The message they hear is: your gatekeeping role no longer binds us.
That is why the reaction is moralized contempt rather than technical rebuttal. If the issue were just accuracy, elites would argue data. Instead they pathologize the speaker. Stupid. Dangerous. Conspiratorial. Radicalized. Those labels are not about truth. They are about expulsion from the respectable coalition.
“Alternative facts” also collapse a crucial elite monopoly. Elites depend on asymmetric credibility. Their power rests on being treated as the final arbiter of reality even when they are wrong. Once rival narratives are allowed to persist socially, the elite loses its ability to enforce consensus through reputation alone. That is why the phrase triggers such panic. It names the possibility of parallel legitimacy.
Alliance Theory also explains why elites rarely punish their own for factual errors. Internal mistakes are handled quietly. External challenges are treated as heresy. The difference is not truthfulness but loyalty. An insider who lies still affirms the alliance hierarchy. An outsider who questions it does not.
So elite contempt is strategic, not accidental. It functions to signal boundaries. Believe this or you are not one of us. Speak this way and you are unclean. The fury is not about facts being wrong. It is about facts no longer being obedient.
Forward-looking point. As long as elites rely on moral contempt instead of transparent credibility, alternative fact ecosystems will keep growing. Alliance suppression works only while the alliance looks competent. Once it looks self-protective, contempt accelerates defection rather than stopping it.
Gemini says: Elite contempt for alternative facts functions as a mechanism for boundary enforcement rather than a simple defense of truth. In Alliance Theory, a group maintains its status by controlling the definitions of reality. The professional-managerial class operates through a system of credentialed knowledge where truth is a product of specific institutions like universities, prestige media, and peer-reviewed bodies. When a figure uses alternative facts, they are not just making a factual error. They are signaling a refusal to recognize the authority of those institutions. This is a strategic defection from the elite alliance.
The contempt you observe is the social penalty for this defection. Alliance Theory predicts that a group will respond to internal threats with much more aggression than it does to external ones. When a person with status—like a journalist or a politician—uses alternative facts, they contaminate the “informational purity” of the elite coalition. Contempt serves to mark that person as an outsider. It tells other members of the alliance that the defector is now a moral pollutant and must be shunned to prevent the contamination from spreading. By mocking the “alternative” nature of the facts, elites reinforce the idea that their own facts are the only legitimate ones.
This behavior also serves as a ritual of inclusion for the in-group. Publicly expressing horror or disdain for alternative facts signals that a person belongs to the “correct” alliance. It is a badge of membership. The more performative the contempt, the more clearly the individual demonstrates their loyalty to the credentialed system. This is why you often see elite media figures focus more on the existence of alternative facts than on the specific content of the claims. The content is irrelevant; the act of claiming an alternative reality is the betrayal.
For the audience outside this alliance, the elite focus on alternative facts often feels like a denial of their own lived experience. Alliance Theory suggests that people gravitate toward alternative narratives because those narratives acknowledge the interests of their specific group, whereas the “official” facts often ignore or pathologize them. When elites use contempt to dismiss these alternative views, they inadvertently confirm the “out-group” suspicion that the official truth is merely a tool for maintaining a hierarchy. The contempt does not convince anyone; it simply hardens the boundaries between the two warring coalitions.
The conflict is not about the facts themselves but about who has the right to determine what counts as a fact. The elite class views alternative facts as a form of “epistemic insurrection.” They use contempt to delegitimize the challenge without having to engage with the underlying grievances that make those alternative facts appealing. It is a way of asserting that the game of status and power is the only game in town and that anyone who plays by different rules is mentally or morally deficient.
By early 2026, the term alternative facts has evolved from a specific gaffe into a permanent marker of the border between two warring social coalitions. In the current political landscape, the phrase serves as a high-status shorthand for the elite professional-managerial class. When a credentialed journalist or academic uses it, they are not just identifying a lie. They are performing a ritual that reinforces their own membership in the in-group. They signal to their peers that they remain loyal to the institutional gatekeepers of truth.
Alliance Theory views the use of this term as a form of social distancing. By labeling a claim an alternative fact, the speaker creates a moral and intellectual hierarchy. They suggest that the “out-group” is not just wrong but is operating in an entirely different, lesser reality. This prevents any need for genuine engagement with the opposing side’s arguments. If a claim is an alternative fact, it does not require a rebuttal; it only requires a dismissal. This allows the elite alliance to maintain its internal cohesion by focusing on a shared enemy that they define as fundamentally irrational.
For the populist out-group, the term has become a badge of defiance. They have adopted the elite’s contempt and turned it into a signal of their own. To them, the “official facts” are merely the propaganda of a hostile managerial class. By embracing their own narratives, they demonstrate their loyalty to a rival alliance that prioritizes lived experience or community identity over institutional credentials. They view the elite obsession with “misinformation” as a desperate attempt to regain control over a narrative that has already escaped.
The media landscape of 2026 reflects this total rupture. Political reporting now functions as a series of scouting reports for these two camps. One side uses alternative facts as a punchline to mock the perceived stupidity of the other. The other side uses the term to highlight the perceived arrogance and detachment of the “experts.” Neither side is trying to persuade the other because they no longer share a common set of definitions for what constitutes evidence.
This division confirms that facts are never just neutral bits of data. They are the currency of social alliances. When the elite class expresses contempt for alternative facts, they are defending the value of their own currency. They recognize that if alternative facts gain social legitimacy, the power of their degrees, titles, and institutions will collapse. The “bonfire” Sherman describes is the burning of the shared reality that once allowed these two groups to inhabit the same political world.
LF: “Journos are outraged that Murdoch told his employees what to write… So how do other MSM owners operate?”
ChatGPT: Journalists act outraged about Murdoch because he violated an unwritten alliance norm, not because he did something rare.
Under Alliance Theory, the rule is simple. Owners are allowed to control ideology. They are not allowed to say so out loud.
Here is how most MSM owners actually operate.
Rupert Murdoch
Murdoch is unusually explicit. He tells editors what political outcomes he wants. He intervenes directly. He makes phone calls. This is seen as vulgar not because it is coercive but because it is legible. He collapses the fiction of journalistic autonomy. That embarrasses the class.
The Sulzberger model at The New York Times
The Sulzberger family almost never issue directives like “write X.” Instead they control hiring, promotion, firing, prestige, and internal norms. Editors who internalize the house worldview rise. Those who do not stall or leave. The effect is tighter than Murdoch’s but invisible. Power exercised through selection feels moral. Power exercised through command feels illegitimate.
The Bezos model at The Washington Post
Jeff Bezos does not need to intervene often. His ownership signals elite alignment automatically. Journalists infer the acceptable worldview without being told. The rare moments when Bezos does step in cause shock precisely because they break the illusion. The norm is silent convergence, not freedom.
The corporate hedge fund model
Owners like Alden do not care about ideology at all. They gut newsrooms. Journalists then self-radicalize rhetorically to preserve moral status while losing institutional power. Ideology becomes compensation for impotence. Owners still shape output by deciding what survives.
Why Murdoch draws special outrage
Murdoch treats journalism as openly instrumental. Most elite owners treat it as ritualized legitimacy production. When Murdoch speaks plainly, he exposes that journalism is not a truth-seeking priesthood but an alliance-maintenance system.
That threatens everyone who depends on the pretense.
The key point
MSM outrage is not about owner influence. It is about owner style. Legitimate power in elite coalitions must be exercised indirectly, aesthetically, and with moral cover. Murdoch’s sin is not control. It is candor.
Forward-looking reality
As media economics worsen, more owners will intervene more openly. Each time this happens, trust will drop further. Not because control increased, but because the illusion finally cracked.
Gemini says: The outrage over Murdoch’s direct involvement stems from a breach of the “gentleman’s agreement” that traditionally defines elite media ownership. In Alliance Theory, the difference between Murdoch and other mainstream media (MSM) owners is not the presence of influence, but the method of its application. While Murdoch is known for “political instrumentalism”—direct, often loud intervention in the newsroom—other owners use more subtle, structural forms of control that preserve the appearance of independence while ensuring ideological alignment.
Most MSM owners operate through the appointment of key personnel. By selecting an editor-in-chief or a CEO whose worldview already mirrors their own, an owner like Jeff Bezos or the Sulzberger family removes the need for direct memos. The editor understands the “house style” and the unspoken boundaries of the alliance. This is a form of delegated gatekeeping. The owner does not tell the journalist what to write; they simply hire the kind of person who would never think to write anything else. This creates a culture of self-censorship where journalists intuitively avoid stories that would embarrass the parent company or its major advertisers.
Another powerful mechanism is the control of resources and “audience adjustment.” Owners determine the budget for investigative desks, the focus of the marketing department, and the specific demographics the outlet targets. If an owner wants to align with the professional-managerial class, they invest in high-status, “prestige” content that appeals to that group’s values. This structural pressure forces the newsroom to produce content that validates the worldviews of the elite alliance. It is a quieter, more efficient form of control than Murdoch’s hands-on approach because it allows the journalists to believe they are acting autonomously.
The “firewall” between business and editorial is often more of a semi-permeable membrane. In large conglomerates, news divisions are small parts of a much larger corporate puzzle. The need to maintain profitability and avoid lawsuits naturally steers the editorial line toward “safe” perspectives that do not threaten the status quo. This homogenization of content is a byproduct of the owners’ shared interest in a stable, pro-business environment. While they may not send a daily directive, the structural conditions they create ensure that the “bonfire” of dissenting ideas is kept well away from the newsroom.
Murdoch’s sin, in the eyes of his peers, was not that he had an agenda, but that he was too honest about it. By intervening directly, he exposed the machinery of influence that other owners prefer to keep hidden behind the veil of “editorial independence.” His transparency about the alliance between media and power is what makes him a moral pollutant to the credentialed class, who rely on the myth of neutrality to maintain their own status.
Elite newsrooms like The New York Times or The Washington Post maintain a complex architecture of ethical codes that function as a “social immune system” for their alliance. While Rupert Murdoch’s model is often direct and transactional, other owners like Jeff Bezos or the Sulzberger family use these codes to establish a state of “unconscious alignment.” This system ensures that the owner never has to give a direct order because the newsroom has already internalized the boundaries of the professional-managerial class.
The most effective tool in this architecture is the formal Code of Ethics. These documents are not just lists of rules; they are status signals. By publicly committing to principles like “independence,” “impartiality,” and “minimizing harm,” an outlet establishes itself as a member of the “clean” alliance. This is a direct contrast to the “unclean” image of the Murdoch empire. In Alliance Theory, these codes serve as a ritual of boundary enforcement. They tell the public—and more importantly, the credentialed elite—that this newsroom is a safe space for their worldviews.
The primary difference in operation lies in the mechanism of control.
Structural vs. Instrumental Control
Instrumental Control (The Murdoch Model): Murdoch uses his power like a blunt instrument. He calls editors, sends memos, and openly moves personnel based on political utility. This is “instrumental” because the media is a tool for a specific, visible end. This approach is easy to criticize because the fingerprints are visible.
Structural Control (The MSM Model): Owners like Bezos or the Ochs-Sulzberger family rely on structural control. They appoint an executive editor who shares their fundamental values and social standing. Once that person is in place, the owner can step back. The editor hires managers, who hire reporters, all of whom have been vetted for their “fit” within the alliance. The code of ethics then acts as a filter: it allows for intense debate within a narrow, “safe” range of opinion while reflexively excluding ideas that would threaten the alliance’s status.
The Function of the “Firewall”
The “firewall” between the business side and the newsroom is often described as a sacred barrier. In reality, it functions as a mechanism for plausible deniability. By maintaining this wall, the owner can claim they have no influence over the reporting, while the newsroom can claim they are acting solely on journalistic merit. However, the newsroom is fully aware of who pays the bills and which stories generate the kind of “prestige” that keeps the alliance strong. This creates a state of self-regulation where reporters intuitively avoid “moral pollutants”—stories or perspectives that would alienate their elite peers or corporate backers.
Ethics as a Shield
When mainstream journalists express outrage over Murdoch’s interference, they are defending the value of their own ethical badges. If the public begins to believe that all media is just a tool for its owners, then the specific “moral authority” of the prestige press vanishes. The code of ethics is the shield that protects their status as the only legitimate arbiters of truth. For these journalists, Murdoch isn’t just a bad boss; he is a traitor to the guild who has exposed the “noble lie” that keeps their alliance in power.
