The death of Ted Turner this week at age 87 has sparked a wave of tributes and reflections on the legacy of a media titan who turned his father’s advertising company into a global media empire that included CNN. One of the most consequential media entrepreneurs of the modern era, Turner’s influence also stemmed from buying sports teams, championing environmental causes, and promoting the elimination of nuclear weapons.

For all his accomplishments, though, it’s the launch of the first 24-hour cable TV news channel for which he’s best known. In fact, the extent of his influence may become even clearer when viewed through the lens of alternative history — specifically, by imagining how different the world might look had he never flipped the switch on CNN back in June of 1980 at all.

A sort of reverse butterfly effect, in other words.

The media world CNN founder Ted Turner set in motion

By launching CNN, of course, Turner hastened the arrival of an always-on news cycle, one that would eventually fracture into opinion- and outrage-driven echo chambers. The hyper-partisan food fights that came to dominate cable also rewired politics, culture, and how the general public consumes information. To quote The Hollywood Reporter: “There is no one in American history who has done more to change how the world gets its news, for better or for worse, than Ted Turner.“

Suppose, though, that he’d never launched CNN at all.

Politics, to say the least, might have become less of a daily spectacle, and foreign policy less driven by real-time images and footage as opposed to more careful assessment and analysis.

At a minimum, it would also have meant a delay in the globalization of information that CNN’s journalism helped accelerate. And the impact would keep rippling out from there.

Because as soon as you’ve imagined a world where Turner never launched CNN, the thought experiment requires continuing with its downstream effects: Like, what about Fox News more than a decade later?

The fallout of a world without CNN

Even if, in this scenario, Rupert Murdoch had still founded the conservative-leaning cable news channel with Roger Ailes in 1996, the absence of CNN would have changed its context dramatically. Fox News was launched into a media environment Murdoch and Ailes believed was dominated by liberal-leaning mainstream TV news, with CNN among the institutions it could define itself against.

Indeed, Fox’s famous slogan (“Fair and Balanced”) reflected that mission.

Without Turner’s CNN setting the tone and inviting the backlash, the resulting cable ecosystem would certainly have looked far different if Fox had enjoyed first-mover advantage. It’s even possible it might not have launched at all, without the incumbent CNN to position itself against.

And that’s where this “What if Ted Turner had never launched CNN?” experiment gets especially fascinating.

Again, it’s possible that Murdoch would have still founded some version of Fox that was slanted to the right. For the sake of this exercise, though, no Fox would mean no huge primetime Fox platform for hosts like Bill O’Reilly, Megyn Kelly, and Tucker Carlson, all of whom became household names on Fox and parlayed their high profiles after leaving the network into solo broadcast endeavors. And that’s just for a start.

No Fox News would also mean no Fox-sized cable platform helping amplify President Trump’s political rise. No Fox born from backlash to CNN might also mean no networks like Newsmax, which positioned itself as a more conservative alternative when some viewers decided even Fox had grown too moderate.

Another thing that’s possible from this alternate timeline where CNN never launched is a slower arrival of the always-on news environment that later merged with the modern attention economy. Crisis fatigue, punchy chyron announcements, and an influencer-driven news culture are all part of this equation and can trace themselves back to the birth of 24-hour cable news.

Remove CNN from the picture, as I’ve done in this what-if, and the entire modern media ecosystem would almost certainly have developed more slowly or less intensely. The ripples, in other words, extend out far beyond just news and politics.

Ultimately, however one views Turner’s creation, the counterfactual makes one truth unmistakable: Launching CNN did so much more than add another TV channel to the dial. The world may well have turned out radically different without it.

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