Jen Psaki’s primetime MSNBC show is crashing harder than Biden’s approval numbers. The former Biden spokeswoman replaced Rachel Maddow but can’t even pull half her audience. Ratings are collapsing as Americans reject her stale talking points and shameless Democrat spin.
The Briefing with Jen Psaki landed in fourth place on MSNBC during its second week. It got crushed by Fox News and even lost to CNN. Only 79,000 viewers in the key demo tuned in—proof that nobody wants to hear a Biden flack gaslight the country after dark.
Psaki’s disastrous numbers are a 47% drop from Maddow’s last full week. MSNBC thought swapping a radical lesbian with a Biden loyalist would save their failing network. Instead, they got a snooze-fest that even Maddow’s leftovers like Nicolle Wallace are beating.
This isn’t MSNBC’s first woke disaster. They already fired Joy Reid for terrible ratings and demoted Alex Wagner after her show bombed. Now they’re recycling Biden administration has-beens while audiences flee. It’s like watching a sinking ship throw anchors overboard.
The network’s leadership keeps pushing far-left radicals instead of real journalists. Psaki spent years lying for Biden about border chaos, inflation, and his cognitive decline. Now she’s doing the same act on TV—and hardworking Americans aren’t buying it.
MSNBC’s collapse proves the American people are done with elitist Democrats and their media cheerleaders. They’d rather watch paint dry than suffer through Psaki’s robotic defense of failed policies. This is what happens when networks put ideology over truth.
Conservatives warned this would happen. Psaki’s a political operative, not a journalist. Her show is just taxpayer-funded propaganda repackaged for prime time. The ratings freefall shows even MSNBC’s base is tired of being lectured by out-of-touch liberals.
The message is clear: Americans want news, not Biden apologists. Until MSNBC stops shoving left-wing activism down viewers’ throats, their ratings will keep tanking. Psaki’s humiliation is just the latest chapter in the network’s long march to irrelevance.