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

Dave Portnoy, founder of Barstool Sports, believes that many Americans simply don't have faith in mainstream news organizations, has built enough trust in their loyal fan base that can build strong, successful news outlets.

“It's all about trust, and I don't think many young people trust traditional media. They've been talking about people like me for 20 years, so they trust people like me,” Portnoy told Fox News Digital.

The Trump administration is offering the coveted seat in the James S. Brady Press briefing room “new media voices producing news-related content” and barstool personality Jack Mac I expressed interest When joining the White House, Portnoy appears to be included in the concept.

“I think there are places where younger generations consume news from very different types of people,” Portnoy said.

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Barstool Sports founder Dave Portnoy believes he has built enough trust with his audience to help him build a news outlet that covers the White House.

Portnoy said the White House is moving to include new media announced in January by Press Secretary Caroline Levitt.

“There are a million ways to get it,” he said.

“Facebook, Instagram, Tiktok, they're all new and people are just consuming the media in a different way than they used to,” he continued. “And I don't know that mainstream media has really caught up with it.”

In interviewing President Trump at the White House in 2020, Portnoy noted that people often try to portray barstools as a political platform. He could not pass on the “surreal” opportunity to sit with the Rose Garden president, but Portnoy feels that the company is largely away from politics.

“We still consider ourselves a comedy site, but sometimes it's more serious, sometimes not,” he said.

New York Times Magazine recently unveiled a long feature in Portnoy's headlines. “How Manosphere has become mainstream entertainment,” he said.

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Dave Portnoy

New York Times Magazine recently highlighted the popularity of Dave Portnoy's often viral pizza reviews. ((Photo: Tom Briglia/Getty Images))

Negative terms are nothing new to Portnoy, who has looked publicly for nearly 20 years and launched the barstool in 2003 as a “gambling and sports” newspaper that he distributed around Boston.

“Manosphere, the peer culture, everything, we've heard a lot, so we didn't surprise them that they used it that way. I think it's really like a bar stool and a simple way to see what we did, but I'm not sure I've heard it,” Portnoy said.

Portnoy feels that his work, “has been treated for a long time as an avatar for everything that elite media is not,” supports the notion that he is trusted enough to one day launch a news organization.

“In a strange way, [the Times] Why were people like me explaining people like me? Not just pizza, it's like they followed me. I've been doing bar stools like I've been in 20 years and they've seen me say it all, talk and react. That's the trust I have,” Portnoy said before criticizing Willie Staley. I wrote a story.

“He says, 'Oh, here's this pizza thing, and it's actually funny, and he's not the person I thought it was,” and puts it like an outlier, like in the following sentence. “But you actually see me, you don't think I'm a jerk, you're just saying I'm a jerk because of something in your own newspaper you've read.”

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The Trump administration is offering the coveted seat in the James S. Brady Press Briefing Room to “New Media Voices Creating News-Related Content.” (Samuel Corum/Politico/Bloomberg Getty Images)

Portnoy doesn't think news consumers should know exactly what they say about people whose publications are based solely on outlets, but the work of New York Times Magazine is the latest example of the opposition being true.

“So people don't trust it,” he said.

He suggested that a reporter who portrays him in negative light was wrong “like 50%” if he was burned out where he was really standing on a critical issue.

“Why trust someone when you already know what they're trying to think about, regardless of the problem, before you ask a question?” Portnoy said.

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The New York Times did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

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