WorldAdvertisement
One considered email each morning. No noise. Unsubscribe anytime.
Advertisement

A CNN NewsNight segment turned combative as commentator Charles Blow called a New York Post figure a 'child' while Ana Navarro accused the same guest of lying.
A panel discussion on CNN's NewsNight devolved into a sharp personal confrontation when commentator Charles Blow called New York Post contributor [VERIFY: full name and title of Moynihan] a "child," and fellow CNN panelist Ana Navarro accused the same figure of "lying" — an exchange that quickly drew attention online.
The incident unfolded during what appeared to be a heated debate over [VERIFY: the specific political topic or news story under discussion at the time of the segment]. As the conversation grew more contentious, Blow directed the remark at Moynihan in what witnesses and viewers described as a pointed personal rebuke rather than a policy criticism.
Navarro, a CNN political commentator and co-host of ABC's The View, separately accused Moynihan of making a false claim during the discussion, telling him directly on air that he was "lying" — a charge that Moynihan [VERIFY: disputed, accepted, or did not respond to on camera].
Blow, a progressive commentator and former opinion columnist for The New York Times, has been a regular presence on CNN panels. Navarro, once a Republican strategist, has become known for her pointed criticism of conservative media figures and politicians alike. Moynihan represents the New York Post, a Murdoch-owned tabloid with a conservative editorial identity that frequently clashes in tone and framing with CNN's coverage.
Clips from the segment circulated on social media platform X — formerly Twitter — shortly after broadcast, with users on both sides of the political spectrum weighing in [VERIFY: specific accounts or volume of engagement]. The New York Post [VERIFY: whether the outlet responded publicly or posted its own coverage of the exchange].
Confrontations of this kind have become a recurring feature of cable news panel culture, where producers often pair commentators with sharply divergent viewpoints. Critics of the format argue it prioritizes conflict over substantive debate, while supporters contend it reflects genuine disagreement in the public square.
CNN [VERIFY: whether the network issued any comment on the exchange or whether the host of NewsNight intervened during the segment]. Neither Blow nor Navarro had issued a public statement elaborating on their remarks as of [VERIFY: time of publication].
The confrontation adds to a recent pattern of unusually direct on-air clashes between media figures from competing outlets, a trend that analysts say reflects deepening polarization not just in politics but within the media industry itself.

Advertisement
Comments (0)
No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts.
Leave a comment
Comments are reviewed before they appear.