Overuse of the "F" Word - But That Doesn't Let Tucker Carlson Off the Hook for Use of the "C" Word

After the fall of the assumed untouchable Tucker Carlson it was bandied about that he used that crude "c" term at Fox to refer to not only females but also, for some peculiar reason, males. Now in the current print edition of Vanity Fair we find out how Carlson wound up in that oddball linguistic box. 

In the article titled "Outfoxed" by Brian Stelter it is reported the Carlson sized up the usual expletive - the "f" word - as overused. Well, about that, Carlson was right. Even in professional settings, it doesn't take long for the participants who might be relative starngers to plunge into the verbal stylistics of emphasizing a point through the "f" word. As Carlson points out, that has become too common. So much so that it doesn't achieve its rhetorical objective of highlighting a bit of content here and there. 

Most of those with whom we do business, though, won't cut slack for what Carlson had been verbally up to at Fox. He crossed a line we didn't give him permission to do. No, you can't speak like that in a public setting, at least not yet. 

Actualy Carlson crossed many lines. That's why Stelter concludes he got forced out of the popular 8 PM slot. 

In most cases you have only one shot in communications. Jane Genova is a communications coach and content-creator. Complimentary consultation (please text 203-468-8579 or email janegenova374@gmail.com) 

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