The media universe and the business world are still in shock.
Tucker Carlson, the king of cable-TV ratings, is no longer at Fox News, which he helped make a prime-time powerhouse since 2016.
The network on April 24 to everyone's surprise the departure of its star anchor, just days after the company agreed to pay $787.5 million to settle a defamation lawsuit brought by Dominion Voting Systems.
Fox News hosts had wrongfully accused the company of stealing victory in the 2020 presidential election from then-President Donald Trump. The software company sued the network for spreading false accusations that it was at the center of a vast conspiracy to cheat Trump of his victory.
For weeks Fox News hosts including Carlson had claimed that Dominion voting machines, used in some states, enabled widespread fraud in favor of the Democratic candidate, Joe Biden.
But private messaging from those same hosts, uncovered during the discovery process, showed that privately Carlson and others knew those conspiracy theories were false, but that didn't stop them from continuing to hammer on air that Trump was robbed of his victory.
Musk Was One of Carlson's Last Guests
Other proceedings are in progress, in particular a lawsuit similar to that of Dominion Voting Systems brought by Smartmatic, whose voting machines had also been questioned by Fox hosts.
The network canceled the show hosted by Lou Dobbs, another star, who was also promoting conspiracy theories about election fraud.
While no trial took place, the Dominion case exposed to the public the fact that Fox News' hosts were willing to relay information that they knew full well was false.
"FOX News Media and Tucker Carlson have agreed to part ways," the network said in a statement. "We thank him for his service to the network as a host and prior to that as a contributor."
FOX News did not give the reasons for this unexpected and express divorce. Carlson's departure was immediate; his final show was Friday, April 21.
Elon Musk, the CEO of Tesla (TSLA) and owner of Twitter, was one of Carlson's final guests. His interview was broadcast over two evenings, April 18 and 19. During the interview, the two personalities, who have become conservative icons, discussed a range of subjects, including Musk's takeover of Twitter, wokeism, Trump, Biden, free speech, birth rates and more.
It is against this backdrop that some Twitter users have called on Musk to hire Carlson to form a phenomenal duo that conservatives would revere.
The billionaire ruled out this scenario, but he did not close the door to the possibility that Carlson might use Twitter as a lectern for his next professional endeavors.
"Elon Musk should hire Tucker Carlson and start a video service to compete with YouTube,” a user tweeted at the billionaire.
"Or we don't hire anyone, but simply enable content creators to prosper on this platform without applying censorship that goes beyond the law," the billionaire responded.
Musk's Plans for an Everything App
Musk, who wants to make Twitter a super app or everything app like Chinese apps, for a few weeks has been enabling influencers and content creators to monetize their content.
He added a button on Twitter and has ensured that Twitter does not take a cut, unlike Alphabet's (GOOGL) YouTube; Meta Platforms, (META) parent of Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp; and TikTok. The creators get most of the revenue, Musk has said.
"Content creators may wish to enable subscriptions on this platform. Just tap on Monetization in settings," Musk posted on April 24 with a guideline.
On April 18 the tech tycoon said: "Note: creator gets ~92% of subscription for web subscribers (Stripe & CC fees are ~8%), but only 70% on iOS/Android. Twitter keeps nothing. All funds we receive go to the content creator."
By making Twitter the avenue for the creator economy, Musk hopes to make it a kind of hip platform, which would bring back most advertisers. Many have paused the promotion of their products and services on Twitter because of the tech mogul's laissez-faire approach to content moderation.
If Carlson were to choose Twitter to produce content, it would be a big win for Musk in his ambition to compete with Big Tech.
The populist pundit had spectacular ratings: His show, "Tucker Carlson Tonight," averaged more than 3 million viewers a night, making it the top-rated cable show in prime time.