Showing posts sorted by relevance for query MEGYN KELLY. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query MEGYN KELLY. Sort by date Show all posts

Tuesday, January 3, 2017

How Megyn Kelly's Move to NBC Could Change the Cable News Landscape

Following-up from earlier, "Megyn Kelly to Join NBC News."

I watched the "Kelly File" tonight, looking to catch the last of Ms. Megyn's appearances on Fox News. Unlike a lot of conservatives during the GOP primary (especially on Twitter), I wasn't critical of her. I liked her approach. I think Trump said some nasty things. I don't like him any less, but I don't think he shouldn't be called out from time to time.

In any case, it's going to be interesting at Fox News with Megyn gone. The network will be fine. The New York Times reported today that network executives have no plans to change the conservative programming that's made Fox the leader in cable news. That's good. On the other hand, I liked the more news/analysis feel of the 6:00pm hour (Pacific time) between O'Reilly and Hannity. Indeed, I always get a kick with how the "Kelly File" opens with "BREAKING TONIGHT!" It seems so urgent, heh.

In any case, at WaPo:

Megyn Kelly's wholly unsurprising decision to leave Fox News to join NBC leaves a void at the network where she spent the past 12 years, and perhaps nudges the cable news juggernaut in a new direction — while opening the door for media rivals.

Kelly confirmed her job change in a message Tuesday on Twitter after it was first reported by the New York Times.

Already a cable news star before the 2016 election cycle began, Kelly became a household name as she remained poised amid nasty attacks by Donald Trump, who objected to her line of questioning at the first Republican primary debate. Last January, Fox News's then-chairman, Roger Ailes, rejected Trump's demand that the network replace Kelly as a moderator of the second debate, even as the billionaire threatened to boycott the event — which he did.

When former Fox News host Gretchen Carlson accused Ailes of sexual harassment in a lawsuit in July, prompting 21st Century Fox to launch an investigation, Kelly shared her own claim of harassment by Ailes, who resigned later that month.

From then on, Kelly seemed to be viewed as a traitor by some Ailes loyalists who remained at Fox News. Sean Hannity called her a Hillary Clinton supporter in October. Bill O'Reilly criticized Kelly's decision to air dirty laundry in a book released in November.

“If somebody is paying you a wage, you owe that person or company allegiance,” O'Reilly told CBS News. “You don't like what's happening in the workplace? Go to human resources or leave. I've done that. And then take the action you need to take afterward if you feel aggrieved. There are labor laws in this country. But don't run down the concern that supports you by trying to undermine it.”

Kelly's departure from Fox News appeared inevitable. But now that it is here, it is worth considering the effect on cable news...
An interesting piece.

Keep reading.

At at the bottom tweet above, Ms. Megyn announces she leaving the network.

Monday, June 19, 2017

The Tactics Used by Hecklers Against Megyn Kelly Will Soon Be Used Against Rachel Maddow and Others

I said so much on Twitter the other day. Frankly, I was kind of shocked that NBC caved to the mob.

But see Jack Shafer, at Politico, "Megyn Kelly Pantses Alex Jones":

For all the pre-interview fuss, NBC’s new star exposed the Infowars host for what he is. But the controversy was never really about him.

The censorious powers of the heckler’s veto have evolved now to the point that people are willing to call for the banning and shunning of works of journalism not yet published. Former Fox News Channel and current NBC News anchor Megyn Kelly got the treatment this week as news of her Sunday Night With Megyn Kelly interview with Infowars mainspring Alex Jones, well before it was scheduled to air June 18, made the rounds. At least the Ayatollah Khomeini waited for the publication of Satanic Verses before he issued a fatwa ordering the murder of its author, Salman Rushdie.

Sandy Hook Elementary families implored NBC News to dump the segment because Jones has called the Newtown, Connecticut, school killings a hoax—by actors, not real people—designed, Jones said, to encourage new gun control laws. New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio concurred, writing, “Pull the segment.” The NBC affiliate in nearby Hartford refused to air the episode because the “wounds of that day that have yet to heal.” Fleeing from the controversy, advertiser JPMorgan Chase dropped its spots from the show, and the usual voices damned Kelly for giving Jones “a platform.”

Not to be outshone, Jones performed some culture jamming of his own, releasing his own secretly recorded audio of the pre-interview in which Kelly buttered him up. “It’s not going to be some gotcha hit piece, I can promise you that,” Kelly told Jones on the tape. Predictably, Jones made his own call for a boycott, tweeting, “I’m calling for @megynkelly to cancel the airing of our interview for misrepresenting my views on Sandy Hook.”

When Kelly’s show finally aired, she took the mendacious Jones apart in such a textbook manner you had to wonder what all the shouting had been about. The Jones pattern, she said at the segment’s top, is making “reckless accusations followed by equivocations and excuses” when questioned. The two best examples of this are his promotion of the “Pizzagate“ lies about a satanic child porn ring and his wild allegation that Chobani was “importing Migrant Rapists,” as Infowars hyped its report on Twitter. In both cases, lawsuits have forced Jones to retract and apologize for airing these dishonest stories, and yet in conversation with Kelly he still hedges and quibbles like a con artist in an effort to have his conspiracy pizza and keep his yogurt, too. Likewise with the pathetic claims about the Sandy Hook killings. He’s still throwing the see-through drapery of devil’s advocacy to blur the fact that on most subjects he’s talking out of his tinfoil hat.

Short of waterboarding him, I don’t know what more Kelly could have done to expose Jones’ dark methods...

*****

Most viewers extend to broadcasters like Anderson Cooper, Chris Wallace, Jake Tapper and Erin Burnett the sort of goodwill they draw on to tackle fraught topics and subjects that will end up upsetting somebody. Due to her Fox background, Kelly doesn’t command that sort of goodwill—the protests against her show are more about her than they are Alex Jones or Sandy Hook. Kelly’s enemies, places like liberal agitprop outfit Media Matters for America, which has been riding this story hard, would likely be raising a ruckus if she went to work as a Today co-host and did celebrity fluff.

Would the calls for a Kelly boycott be so insistent if a similar technique hadn’t succeeded in driving Fox’s Bill O’Reilly off his network? My guess is that they wouldn’t. Kelly won this round, but she wasn’t the only one to pay the price. If you like edgy, truth-telling journalism, the spirited campaign against her has written a heckler’s veto playbook that future activists and scolds will eventually apply to your preferred anchor, be it Rachel Maddow or Sean Hannity. You’ve been warned.

Friday, April 8, 2016

Donald Trump Is Right About Megyn Kelly

Talk about contrarian. You don't hear this argument much, unless it's at the depths of the Twitter cesspools.

From Ying Ma, at the National Interest:

Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump has repeatedly said that Fox News anchor Megyn Kelly is overrated and treated him unfairly at the first GOP presidential debate last August. Yet with the exception of Trump’s most die-hard supporters, few on the right agree. This is a sign of Trump’s problems with women (73 percent of them currently have an unfavorable view of him), but it is also a symptom of the GOP’s wussiness to ask tough questions about a popular female anchor, as well as of its failure to challenge the insidiousness of the Left’s prevailing narrative about women.

At issue is conservatism’s decades-old battle against identity politics, in which hostility has been declared toward the grievance industry that gins up phony allegations of racial, ethnic or gender injustice.

On the Fox News Channel, Kelly has exhibited a penchant for kissing up to liberal women, fawning over their feminist agenda, berating conservative men and behaving unprofessionally toward guests. No prominent conservative has ever dared to question the perception that Kelly is an exemplary anchor, or to observe that she spends far too much time peddling a softer, kinder version of feminist dogma.

Trump is the only major national figure on the right who has challenged Kelly’s status as a demigod at Fox News. By declaring unabashedly that Kelly is not very good, Trump has—unwittingly—offered conservatives an opportunity to reflect on the grave disservice that a star on the only major conservative television network often does to conservatism.

As it turns out, Kelly’s not being nearly as good as everyone says is directly intertwined with her being not very conservative.
Keep reading.

BONUS: For the establishment take on Kelly, see Variety's recent hagiography, "How Megyn Kelly Survived Donald Trump."

And at Hot Air, "Megyn Kelly: I haven’t decided if I’m staying at Fox News when my contract is up."

Friday, December 13, 2013

Megyn Kelly Shines on Fox

I missed the first week or two of Megyn Kelly's prime-time debut on Fox (I was watching the World Series), but I rarely miss it now. She's fantastic ---- and she's in my wheelhouse with her politics.

At the Washington Post, "Megyn Kelly, Fox News’s brightest star":


NEW YORK — The anchor who might beat Bill O’Reilly gets her eyelash extensions applied one at a time, with tweezers and dabs of glue, about 90 minutes before showtime, right after a motorized gun sprays foundation over her face, neck, shoulders, collarbone and sternum, wiping out a galaxy of light freckles that spreads across her —

Let me stop you right there.

Would you write this way about a man?

About O’Reilly himself?

At least that’s what Megyn Kelly might ask at this point. Kelly, 43, is the host of “The Kelly File,” a live TV program that airs weeknights at 9 p.m. on the Fox News Channel, where she interrupts and challenges guests whenever they resort to talking points or petty distractions. It debuted just over two months ago, and so far its ratings among 25-to-54-year-olds have exceeded those of “The O’Reilly Factor” six times. In November, her first full month in prime time after years in daytime, Kelly was second only to O’Reilly in the overall ratings, which means she’s the No. 2 person on cable news’s No. 1 channel.

“It’s like working on a supermodel every day — a brilliant supermodel,” says makeup artist Maureen Walsh, as she air-brushes Kelly’s skin from milky white to Technicolor...
Continue reading.

Well, Michael Savage made the crude remark sometime back that watching Megyn Kelly's show was like watching porn.

Saturday, August 8, 2015

Donald Trump Attacks Megyn Kelly: 'There Was Blood Coming Out of Her Wherever...'

Well, speaking about those Donald Trump unfavorables, this really might be the beginning of the end.

I'm as anti-PC as they come, but c'mon, Megyn Kelly was "on the rag"?

At Twitchy, "Video: Watch Donald Trump say Megyn Kelly had 'blood coming out of her ... wherever'."

Also, "Game on: Carly Fiorina goes after Donald Trump over his Megyn Kelly comment," and "Donald Trump disinvited from RedState Gathering after comments about Megyn Kelly; Update: Trump camp responds."

Watch: "Donald Trump on Megyn Kelly: 'There Was Blood Coming Out of Her Wherever'."

Like I said on Thursday, we won't know for sure until the next batch of polls comes out. But I'll be surprised if Trump doesn't doesn't take a deep dive in the standings, and not just from the "blood" comments. Those focus groups haven't been kind. But we'll see. We'll see.


Sunday, March 18, 2012

On-Air and Off, Fox News Anchor Megyn Kelly is Smokin' in Well-Tailored Classics

A great piece, at Los Angeles Times, "Megyn Kelly's classic fashion style":
Reporting from New York —— Whether you're an avid viewer of Fox News or have only a passing acquaintance with the network, it's been nearly impossible not to notice anchorwoman and "America Live" host Megyn Kelly. Particularly during the GOP primary round of debates and Super Tuesday coverage, Kelly's position in the lead anchor chair along with co-anchor Bret Baier has put the 41-year-old blond front and center at Fox News as the network's fresh face and opinionated voice of this election season.

Kelly, a former lawyer and subject of a rather racy 2010 GQ photo shoot (for which she makes no apologies), is known for direct, no-nonsense reporting, which has drawn commentary from fans, critics and comedians alike. She's been famously ridiculed, for instance, for calling pepper spray "a food product, essentially" and lauded for defending Chaz Bono's turn on "Dancing With the Stars." Her in-studio interview Wednesday with presidential contender Mitt Romney drew commentary from across the political spectrum.

For Kelly, it's all in a day's work.
More at the link.

And that GQ photo-spread is here: "Megyn Kelly in GQ."

Saturday, April 5, 2014

Viewers Reject Megyn Kelly Dress That Highlights Her Rack

It does look kinda strange, heh.

At Twitchy, "Viewers adore Megyn Kelly, not so sure about Friday’s dress" (via iOWNTHEWORLD).

Megyn Kelly photo megyn-kelly_zpsfeca2647.png

More Megyn Kelly blogging at the link.

Wednesday, October 24, 2018

Megyn Kelly Apologizes

At the Daily Wire, "Yes, Blackface Is Terrible. No, Megyn Kelly Isn't a Racist."

She made the remark yesterday that folks should be able to dress up for Halloween with "black face," although I don't think she knew the full racist history.

She's deeply sorry, though. She's ashamed even, and tears up at the video. I think she's a good, decent person; and like her, I don't kowtow to PC very much, but black face is out.

Watch:


Friday, July 23, 2021

Sports Illustrated Swimsuit Slams Megyn Kelly Over Naomi Osaka Tweet

Everything's so stupid, especially these summer games (which I'm boycotting, because, well, they're so lame). 

At NBC News, "Sports Illustrated's swimsuit editor calls Megyn Kelly's Naomi Osaka tweet 'unnecessary'":


Friday, November 19, 2010

Megyn Kelly in GQ

Fox News women are the hottest?

Duh.

Via JammieWearingFool, "Need Another Reason to Love Megyn Kelly?"

Also around the 'sphere:

* The Blaze, "
Fox’s Megyn Kelly Makes Revealing GQ Appearance."

* MediaBistro, "
Fox News’ Megyn Kelly in GQ: ‘You may have heard that we’re number one’."

Yep, conservative women are
the hottest!

And amazingly, I've scooped Robert Stacy McCain on this one!

Tuesday, January 3, 2017

Megyn Kelly to Join NBC News

Megyn Kelly's out at Fox News.

Her bottom line was $20 million, which Fox had already guaranteed in a renewed contract. But I'm sure Fox was toxic after the Roger Ailes sexual harassment episode, and I think perhaps to some extent Kelly's controversy with conservatives on her treatment of Donald Trump was an issue. Obviously, for her it was time to move on.

At Politco and CNN:


Also, all over Memeorandum.


ADDED: Stelter, speaking on CNN, said the "bottom line here" is that Kelly wanted to get away from Fox News, to the point of taking a pay cut to do so. Apparently, she's going to have a roving "Katie Couric-type role" at NBC, and better hours, so she can spend more time with her family.

Friday, August 7, 2015

Monday, August 10, 2015

'Viciousness' Against Megyn Kelly Creates Security Concerns for Fox

Well, she certainly adopted some of the SJW-left's "war on women" rhetoric, but obviously the outrage is stupid and over the top.

At Gateway Pundit, "Report: ‘Viciousness” Against Megyn Kelly Online Has Created Security Concerns for FOX":

Megyn Kelly photo gop-debate-kelly_zpso6gm6vdq.jpg
On Monday CNN reported that FOX News has increased security at their New York headquarters following the debate.
“There has been so much viciousness directed at Kelly online that it has created a security concern for FOX. She will be back on the air tomorrow night (Monday) Maybe Trump will come on her show at some point.

Wednesday, June 3, 2009

Megyn Kelly Hammers Socialist Bernie Sanders on Single-Payer Health!

Via Gateway Pundit, "Megyn Kelly Shouts Down Bernie Sanders On Dem-Only Nationalized Health Care Plan":

Gateway Pundit adds this:

Megyn Kelly and Bill Hemmer reported on the Democrat-only meeting held yesterday with President Obama on nationalized health care. Dems want to ram this trillion dollar boondoggle through Congress before the August recess.

Like the Stimulus Bill, this will be another Democratic bill. They are excluding Republicans from the process. Then later they'll blame the GOP for not offering any ideas. And, the media will continue to play right along with their liberal cohorts in Congress.

That's how things work these days.
See more on the health debate at the Wall Street Journal, "Why the Health Care Rush? Democrats don't think their bill can stand public inspection."

See also the thread at
Memeorandum.

Saturday, August 8, 2015

Hand-Wringing in GOP After Donald Trump's Remarks on Megyn Kelly

Okay, following-up from earlier, "Donald Trump Attacks Megyn Kelly: 'There Was Blood Coming Out of Her Wherever...'"

I don't like Trump's comments, obviously. But I'm not ready to kick him to the curb either. For one thing, I can't stand Erick Erickson. He's exactly what's wrong with so-called movement conservatives: they're afraid of their own shadows with stultifying political correctness. So this particular round of right-wing infighting reminded me that we do this every four years, most notably over conservative reactions to Mitt Romney in both 2008 and 2012. So I tweeted:



And now here's the New York Times to trumpet the news, "Donald Trump Disinvited From Conservative Event Over Remark on Megyn Kelly" (via Memeorandum):
Donald J. Trump’s suggestion that a Fox News journalist had forcefully questioned him at the Republican presidential debate because she was menstruating cost him a speaking slot Saturday night at an influential gathering of conservatives in Atlanta. It also raised new questions about how much longer Republican Party leaders would have to contend with Mr. Trump’s disruptive presence in the primary field.

With Mr. Trump at center stage, the event Thursday shattered television viewership records for primary debates: Nearly 24 million people watched. But any hopes that he would try to reinvent himself inside the Cleveland arena as a sober-minded statesman, or that he would collapse under scrutiny and tough questions, vaporized in the opening minutes.

By the weekend, as Mr. Trump’s latest eruption rippled through Republican circles, the conversation had turned to whether the party, and his rival presidential contenders, should continue to accommodate his candidacy, quietly hoping that this would be the moment he burned out — or should try to run him out on a rail...
It shouldn't be up to party elites, obviously. It should be up to the rank-and-file, and for the life of me I have no idea how Trump will fare in this next batch of polls. If they're anything like the Drudge poll, Trump should be flying high. But if those focus groups turn out to be a harbinger, then Trump's going to be dropping like a rock. Meanwhile, as Rick Perry's not catching fire, with a mediocre debate performance making things worse, I'm pretty much firmly in the Carly Fiorina camp now. Just imagining her as the first woman president is so fantastic I can hardly see straight. She's so smart and articulate it's ridiculous. I'm really exited for her.

Lots more at Memeorandum.

Wednesday, October 26, 2016

Newt Gingrich Blows Up at Megyn Kelly: 'You Are Fascinated with Sex!' (VIDEO)

I think Megyn handled herself well, actually.

I know conservatives say she's all anti-Trump, but if we had more people in the media like her we'd have a lot better news coverage.

Anyway, the heat makes for good television.

From the "Kelly File" last night:

Also, at WaPo, via Memeorandum, "‘You are fascinated with sex’: That Megyn Kelly-Newt Gingrich showdown was one for the ages."



Saturday, August 8, 2015

Donald Trump Is Different

From Stephen Hayes, at the Weekly Standard, "The Trump Goes On" (via Memeorandum):
It’s not over. And it’s likely to end badly.

In an interview on CNN last night, Donald Trump suggested that Megyn Kelly’s tough questioning was inspired by her menstrual cycle. “You could see there was blood coming out of her eyes,” Trump told CNN's Don Lemon on Friday night. “Blood coming out of her—wherever.”

He refused to apologize, of course, but after widespread condemnation, Trump, who is running on candor and straight talk, sought to explain his comments in a Tweet. “Re Megyn Kelly quote: ‘you could see there was blood coming out of her eyes, blood coming out of her wherever’ (NOSE). Just got on w/thought.’”

It’s a comment that might end any other presidential campaign. Trump is different, in part because this isn’t a campaign. It’s an extended media-driven ego ride.

From the beginning, he’s played by different rules because the media have let him. Trump works just blocks from the headquarters of the major broadcast and cable outlets. But as he’s rolled out his Trump for President brand, he has gotten journalists to come to him. He sits for interviews in the gilded atrium of Trump Towers, a nice home field advantage and one that sets him apart from the other politicians sitting in boring studios.

Trump has conducted frequent telephone interviews on cable networks, sometimes several times a day, and last weekend did “phoners” on two Sunday morning political shows. (Has any other candidate this cycle, in either party, been given an opportunity to do a television interview by phone?) If he were asked policy questions, the arrangement would give him an unfair advantage, with the opportunity to answer questions with a cheat sheet in front of him and Google at his fingertips. But substantive questions about the country and its problems are the exceptions in Trump’s conversations with journalists, who prefer to ask him about his latest controversial comment or seek to provoke the next one by asking him about his opponents. (Trump’s comments about Kelly didn’t provoke any follow-up questions from CNN host Don Lemon, whose interview with Trump continued for several more minutes). So the cycle continues: Trump says something outrageous that may or may not have any relevance to serving as president, he’s asked about it in a largely substance-free interview, and ratings climb—along with Trump’s name ID and poll ratings.

Trump is right, sadly, when he boasts that he is partly responsible for the 24 million viewers who tuned into the debate Thursday night. He has convinced himself that people watch because they love him and in a limited sense, he’s probably right about that, too. While I suspect that the Trump hype is driven by curiosity more than admiration, there is no doubt some segment of the population that is properly understood now as “Trump supporters.” That segment is small and will be shrinking in the coming weeks, but it won’t disappear.

The true Trump apologists are way too far in now. They've invested too much to bail on him. So his defenders will become increasingly desperate to convince people that this is all part of the establishment's failure to understand their anger and the media's failure to appreciate Trump’s appeal.

That’s backwards. It's not that the media haven’t failed to give Trump enough credit; we’ve given his supporters too much...
Keep reading.

The problem for Hayes is that he's clearly invested in a Republican victory in 2012. That's okay if you want to practice partisan journalism, and who doesn't nowadays? But from the perspective of the political system and democratic governance, it might not turn out bad at all.

Some folks seem to forget that the reason for the primaries is to foster robust competition between competing ideas. There's no law that says a candidate has to be an establishment politician. The horror for the GOP is that should Trump indeed run an independent presidential campaign, he'll no doubt siphon votes from the Republican ticket.

The ready comparison is to Ross Perot in 1992. The problem with that comparison is that Perot screwed up royally dropping out of the race during the Democrat Party convention, which was in June. Perot said the Dems had taken up all his positions and he was satisfied things like deficit reduction would be tackled within the party system. Big mistake. The astronomical grassroots anger at the beltway establishment was off the charts. The 1991 recession was grinding people down and defense downsizing was creating a nightmare for thousands upon thousands of people losing their jobs. Three-quarters of Americans thought the country was on the wrong track.

Perot ended up taking over 19 percent of the vote in November after he'd reentered the race in September of that year and participated in the presidential debates. Had he not exited in June, thereby alienating untold numbers of supporters, who once jilted weren't going back, Perot could have easily doubled his vote totals and won the presidency with a plurality of the vote. As it is Bill Clinton only won 43 percent. Jigger some of the numbers around, reducing the Democrat and Republican share of the electorate, and boom! Hey, stranger things have happened in American politics.

Sure, it's a long-shot scenario, and the concatenation of circumstances that propelled Perot that year might be completely irrelevant to what's happening today. What's not in doubt is that Trump is tapping into some kind of huge groundswell of discontent, especially on the immigration issue. Normally rock-ribbed conservatives are mounting vociferous defenses of Trump because they feel he's genuinely fighting for the issues they believe in. What's more, this purported incestuous relationship Trump has with the media only helps air those issues conservatives care about, propelling debates about illegal immigration, for example, to substantive levels not seen for years, if not decades. That's a good thing for American politics. Trump is right when he says the media types wouldn't even be talking about securing the border if it wasn't for him.

So what's really likely to happen? Well, for one thing we're going to have an extremely interesting campaign. And it's going to be a much more substantive campaign with Trump's presence, despite the attacks on the casino mogul as ill-informed and out only for himself. If the public starts getting bored with him we'll know soon enough. Lord knows there's no shortage of public opinion polls. And that's also good. We'll see Trump's popularly fade and other candidates will rise to the top. But those candidates will ignore the issues Trump's championed at their peril. I seriously doubt a pro-amnesty candidate will have much of a chance by the time Iowa and New Hampshire come around. And of course more and more voters will start to coalesce around a candidate that looks to combine conservative bona fides with the best chance of defeating Hillary Clinton. But it's going to be a sad day in conservative America if primary voters cluster around the mean of some Mitt Romney-esque candidate, because we've been down the "electabilty" road before. What we need is a movement candidate. We need another Reagan. We need to get someone who fosters the passions of the people and exudes America's exceptionalism. People will to rally to someone who looks most likely to restore America's promise, and America's standing in the world.

Who will it be? Scott Walker and Ted Cruz come to mind, but we'll see. Maybe Marco Rubio. He's learned his lesson on the Gang of Eight. Maybe Mike Huckabee. Maybe John Kasich. Maybe Carly Fiorina will somehow continue her phenomenal rise and do well in the 2016 primaries.

Either way, the system will work its will, and Donald Trump will either generate enough popular support to have a shot at the presidency, or he'll fall by the wayside. All the gnashing and thrashing we're seeing now demonstrates just how important Trump's moment is to American politics. Yes, Trump's different. He's also extremely consequential. Let's see how it plays out. It should be up to the voters to decide if he's not up to speed.

Wednesday, June 18, 2014