Endless live TV feeds, analysts breathlessly picking apart each gesture, newspapers bursting with commentary: Queen Elizabeth II's death has been covered from every angle by the world's media.
Endless live TV feeds, analysts breathlessly picking apart each gesture, newspapers bursting with commentary: Queen Elizabeth II's death has been covered from
Endless live TV feeds, analysts breathlessly picking apart each gesture, newspapers bursting with commentary: Queen Elizabeth II's death has been covered from every angle by the world's media.
Endless live TV feeds, analysts breathlessly picking apart each gesture, newspapers bursting with commentary: Queen Elizabeth II's death has been covered from every angle by the world's media.
STEVE INSKEEP, HOST:
In France, a news channel that sometimes plays up fears and conspiracy theories is becoming more popular. It s accused of pushing a far-right agenda and throwing fuel on France s culture wars. NPR s Eleanor Beardsley reports on what is sometimes called the French Fox News.
(SOUNDBITE OF CNEWS BROADCAST)
ERIC ZEMMOUR: (Speaking French).
ELEANOR BEARDSLEY, BYLINE: Eric Zemmour is the star of CNews. The far-right commentator is an adept debater with deep historical knowledge. But his incendiary anti-Muslim, anti-immigrant diatribes have earned him hate speech condemnations from France s audiovisual authority and French courts. Last September, he launched into unaccompanied young migrants