Fairness & Accuracy In Reporting
Nearby media companies
10461
Bandipora
W 29th Street Rm
10001
E12th Street
W 29th Street
W 29th Street
West 29 Street. Floor
W 31st Street
W 29th Street
West 29th Street
99 Madison Ave suite 5015
W 29th Street
West 29th Street
FAIR, the national media watch group, has been offering well-documented criticism of media bias and censorship since 1986. http://www.fair.org
Since the fall of 1986, FAIR has been monitoring corporate media to document bias, government influence and skewed reporting, while championing the efforts of independent journalism.
Does Sulzberger actually think that by writing a several-thousand-word warning against Trump’s threat to press freedom, but simultaneously announcing that he will resolutely oppose “taking sides” in this election, he is somehow inoculating himself against right-wing populist hatred of the Times, and any future retribution from a Trump presidency?
Not Reporting on Trump as a Threat to Democracy Is Also a Threat to Democracy
https://fair.org/home/not-reporting-on-trump-as-a-threat-to-democracy-is-also-a-threat-to-democracy/
Corporate news media tend to report economic news like the weather – yes, it affects different people differently but the source, “the economy,” is just stuff that happens. But there’s really no such thing as THE economy; there are policies and practices about taxes and lending and wages – and they are as historically embedded, as preferentially enforced – and as susceptible to intentional change – as everything else. So how should we read reports about the “best Black economy in decades”? Particularly as one question news media rarely include in the daily recitation of numbers is: “Compared to what?”
Dedrick Asante-Muhammad & Algernon Austin on the Black Economy A people-centered press corps would spell out the meaning of economic “indicators” in relation to where we want to go as a society that has yet to address deep historical and structural harms.
Transcript of CounterSpin's interview with Freddy Brewster on the supermarket megamerger:
"In an attempt to allay the concerns from the FTC about this merger, Kroger had promised to sell off 600 stores, slash prices by a billion dollars, and invest a billion dollars in wages if the merger is allowed to go through.
"So what this kind of says and highlights is that Kroger is already buying Albertsons for $24.6 billion, and is willing to invest another $2 billion to bring down prices and to get more wages. That shows that they already have quite a bit of market power. They have $29 billion sitting around that they can use to buy another company and lower prices and give people better wages. Well, why aren't they lowering prices and giving people better wages right now?"
‘They See These Price Hikes as a Good Thing’CounterSpin interview with Freddy Brewster on supermarket megamerger "Kroger's CEO, on a shareholder call, admitted that inflation is a good thing, because it'll allow the company to raise prices."
An Atlantic piece erroneously gives the impression that since the assault on Gaza began last October, it has been the pro-Palestinian left that has enforced speech norms.
A Bookstore Brouhaha Confuses Whose Speech Is Being Curtailed Free speech debates tend to value the importance and rights to a platform of the saintly media class.
FAIR's launching into our fall fundraising appeal, and we need your help! Click here to support this crucial work: https://www.cambeywest.com/EXT/?f=donate&s=I24JO
Thank you!
Despite corporate media’s supposed dedication to preserving Western democracy, the Washington Post and the New York Times have mostly stayed silent on French President Emmanuel Macron’s refusal to respect the winners of the recent election.
US Press Loses Interest as Winners of French Election Aren’t Allowed to Take Power France has gone nearly two months without a legitimate government, and US corporate media don’t seem to care to report on it.
In October 2022, the largest supermarket chain in the US, Kroger, announced a plan to take over the second-largest supermarket chain in the country, Albertsons – in a merger that would create the country’s third-largest private sector employer overall (after Walmart and Amazon), a conglomerate of some 5,000 stores and 710,000 employees. What could go wrong?
Freddy Brewster on Supermarket Megamerger Kroger is currently raising the prices of things like eggs and milk above inflation rates, simply because they can get away with it.
Transcript of CounterSpin's interview with Steve Macek on "dark money":
"OpenSecrets just came out with an analysis where they say that contributions from dark money groups and shell organizations are outpacing all prior elections in this year, and might surpass the $660 million in contributions from dark money sources that flooded the 2020 elections. So they’re projecting that could be as much as a billion dollars. We haven’t heard very much about this."
‘They’re Trying to Pass Laws to Make Dark Money Even Darker’CounterSpin interview with Steve Macek on dark money "Outside forces who, in some cases, do not have to disclose the source of their funding can spend more on a race than the candidates themselves."
Breaking news alerts often feed into predictable patterns that parrot official narratives, and prioritize clicks over well-informed citizens.
Breaking News Alerts Keep Public Posted on Trivia and Trump Media outlets promise comprehensive news alerts about important breaking stories occurring everywhere—but that's not what subscribers are getting.
Despite multiple eyewitnesses describing an Israeli Iron Dome interceptor missile falling on the field during the time of the Majdal Shams strike, the New York Times insisted on spotlighting Israeli and US claims in its headlines, rather than genuinely assessing the facts on the ground.
NYT Uncritically Reported Israel’s Version of Golan Bombing Coverage of the Golan Heights massacre continues a long trend of US media outlets obscuring and distorting reality in order to downplay Israel’s aggressive regional ambitions.
If you were teaching a class called “How to Slime People in a Subtle, Scuzzy Way,” a paragraph from the New York Times‘ obituary of Phil Donahue could be part of the curriculum.
NYT Can’t Forgive Donahue for Being Right on Iraq More than 20 years after the New York Times was catastrophically wrong on the Iraq War, the paper cannot forgive anyone who was right.
Mother Jones reports on FAIR and other nonprofits being subpoenaed by Elon Musk: "The subpoenas represent a new chapter in the legal war Musk launched after advertisers fled X."
Elon Musk’s Lawyers Quietly Subpoena Public Interest Groups The billionaire's legal war over lost X advertisers takes a "really cynical" turn.
If you use the word “democracy” unsarcastically, you likely think it has to something to do with, not only every person living in a society having some say in the laws and policies that govern them, but also the idea that everyone should be able to know what is going on, besides voting, that influences that critical decision-making. “Dark money,” as it’s called, has become business as usual, practically, but still represents the opposite of that transparency, that ability for even the unpowerful to know what’s happening, to know what’s affecting the rules that govern our lives.
A press corps concerned with defending democracy, and not merely narrating the nightmare of crisis, would be talking about it every day in every way. Our guest has written about the gap between what we need and what we get in terms of media.
Steve Macek on Dark Money How do we acknowledge the fact that many people’s opinions are shaped by messages that are created and paid for by folks who work hard to hide their identity and their interests?
The New York Times' deputy opinion editor criticized Bernie Sanders at the DNC for making "policy proposals that put [Kamala] Harris in a big-government vise, binding (or pushing) her in a direction that a lot of moderates do not want to go.” The proposals the Times cited, however, turn out to be mainly unpopular with the New York Times.
Sanders’ Convention Speech Attacked by NYT for Advocating Popular Policies The specific policies the New York Times scolds Bernie Sanders for promoting don't seem to be particularly unpopular, with moderates or anyone else.
Transcript of CounterSpin's interview with Emily Sanders on criminalizing pipeline protest:
"The federal penalty for damaging or destroying pipelines is already a felony charge of up to 20 years in prison. But in hearing testimony that I found, and policy briefs posted online, oil industry trade group executives were basically pushing lawmakers to expand the definition of so-called 'attacks' on pipelines that can be punished under felony charges to include vague language like 'disruptions of service' or 'attacks on construction sites.'
"And that could implicate a much broader set of activities that are used to protest fossil fuel infrastructure."
‘This Is a Push to Pass Laws Criminalizing Protest of Fossil Fuel Infrastructure’: CounterSpin interview with Emily Sanders on criminalizing pipeline protest "This rulemaking process is supposed to be about protecting community members and making sure pipelines are safe, not about preventing protests."
Phil Donahue took progressive issues and mainstreamed them to millions through his syndicated daytime show. His short-lived MSNBC primetime show was canceled in 2003 because—as the leaked internal memo said—Donahue represented “a difficult public face for NBC at a time of war.”
Phil Donahue Changed My Life—and Millions of Others Phil Donahue was a trailblazer in bringing social issues to a national audience as a daytime broadcast TV host, and then he was pretty much banished from TV by MSNBC.
We have not forgotten the years of protest by the people of Standing Rock in resistance to the Dakota Access pipeline. The news and images were dramatic, the cause couldn’t have been more fundamental, the support was international and cross-community. Fossil fuel makers, who would like to keep making money from the destruction of the planet’s capacity for life, and their ally/enablers in law and law enforcement, want nothing like that to ever happen again, and certainly not for you to see it and take inspiration.
Emily Sanders on Criminalizing Pipeline Protest, Victoria St. Martin on Suing Fossil Fuel Companies The crickets you’re hearing about efforts to eviscerate the right to protest the impacts of climate disruption? That’s all intentional.
In a study of the media discussion around student-led encampments against the assault on Gaza, FAIR found no student protesters (or students) on the Sunday talkshows, two student protesters out of 79 guests on four daily news shows, and one op-ed written by a student protester out of 51 opinion pieces on the encampment in four leading newspapers.
Students Left Out of Discussions About Student Gaza Protests A new FAIR study finds that media conversations about student-led campus encampments in solidarity with Palestine rarely included students themselves.
Major press outlets are amplifying Republican claims that Tim Walz, as governor of Minnesota, let the Twin Cities burn during the 2020 George Floyd uprising. By spotlighting these charges, corporate media are assisting GOP attempts to portray themselves as the party of law and order against a tide of anarchic anti-police chaos.
Press Amplifies GOP Attack Line: Walz Too Slow to Use Force Against BLM Corporate media are allowing the debate to revolve around the question of whether Tim Walz was quick enough to use force against Black Lives Matter protests.
Transcript of CounterSpin's interview with Lee Hepner on the Google monopoly:
"Google maintains its power through that circular system. It pays for exclusive agreements across Apple, Samsung, Mozilla, other device manufacturers, and by virtue of those exclusive agreements, it achieves scale that it then sells to advertisers for extraordinary revenue, and then it reinvests that revenue back at the beginning, in securing those exclusive agreements. So you really see how this is a self-reinforcing monopoly that Google has been able to maintain through anti-competitive conduct."
‘Google Is Able to Profit Extraordinarily Off of Not Having Competition’: CounterSpin interview with Lee Hepner on Google monopoly "Google has maintained its monopoly position, not necessarily by having a superior product, but by blocking out rivals."
The New York Times suggests that the only possible motive for opposing Josh Shapiro as vice presidential candidate is because he is Jewish--and also that it would have been good to choose him because his policy positions would have angered the left.
NYT Cynically Suggests Antisemitism Cost Shapiro the VP Slot The New York Times has stood by the fiction that Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro, who made the short list of vice presidential hopefuls, didn’t get the nod because of left-wing antisemitism.
Since the Trump campaign is trying to run the Swift Boat playbook against Tim Walz, it's worth remembering what a bad job corporate media did handling the original Swift Boat attacks.
Judgment Reserved to Judgment Reversed Advocacy organizations typically receive little time or space to express their opinions in mainstream media discussions, so it’s not surprising that they turn to political advertisements as an alternative means of getting their message out to the public. A paid publicity campaign may legitimize th...
“Google is a monopolist, and it has acted as one to maintain its monopoly.” So ruled District Court Judge Amit Mehta in United States vs. Google, being called a landmark antitrust case that will affect not just Google but potentially all tech giants in the current landscape.
Lee Hepner on Google Monopoly, Shayana Kadidal on Guantanamo Plea Deal Does the company that "corners the market" do so because people simply prefer what they sell? The anti-monopoly ruling against Google challenges that idea of how things work.
Transcript of CounterSpin's interview with Tim Wise on "DEI hires":
"All CRT tries to do, and this is so important for people to understand, is to provide a theoretical grounding so that when you look out and you see racial disparity, you have a framework and a lens for understanding it. And without a systemic lens, frankly, the only explanation left is the one the right prefers, which is, these Black and brown folks are broken. And CRT is saying, 'No, it’s not Black and brown folks who are broken.'
"It’s not necessarily that white people are bad. CRT doesn’t bash white people. That’s a great myth. CRT doesn’t really say anything about white people as people. It says something about white supremacy as a system, historically and contemporaneously. And if you don’t have that framework, I don’t know how you can make sense of the world around you, except by blaming the people on the bottom for being there."
‘DEI Has Become the New N-Word’CounterSpin interview with Tim Wise on 'DEI hires' "When you're used to hegemony, pluralism begins to feel like oppression."
After Israel targets political leaders in Beirut and Tehran, some argue that the best way to prevent an escalating regional conflict is to give more weapons to Israel.
Pundits Push for Regional Escalation in the Wake of Israeli Assassinations Following Israel’s assassinations of a Hezbollah commander in Beirut and a Hamas negotiator in Tehran, corporate media pundits have called for the US and Israel to escalate the region-wide war.
Transcript of CounterSpin's interview with Keith McHenry on criminalizing homelessness:
"Every time there's even a slight proposal to house some homeless people, build a building for them or open a hotel for homeless people, you end up with riots and protests, as you can see has happened in places like New York City. And then there's the pitting of immigrants and homeless against one another, which is another divide-and-conquer tactic that is occurring, that's also making housing homeless people very difficult.
"So there's just no policy, no national policy, no state policies, really, to resolve this, other than through criminalization."
‘The Problem Is, There’s No Place for Anyone to Go’: CounterSpin interview with Keith McHenry on criminalizing homelessness "Millions of dollars have been spent just driving people from corner to corner, with no even slight effort, really, to house people."
Become a monthly donor and support independent media during challenging financial times. We won't stop speaking truth to power and advocating for a truly just and democratic press! Click the link to make a monthly pledge.
https://www.cambeywest.com/EXT/?f=donate
Thank you! 💙
While Republicans are clearly scrambling to find profitable lines of attack in a new presidential race, they’re deploying one line that draws on a lot of history: labeling presumptive Democratic nominee Kamala Harris a “DEI hire” – the reference being programs designed to promote diversity, equity and inclusion in the workplace. The notion, if anyone needed it spelled out, is that any and every Black or brown person, or woman, in a job is only there because employers were “forced” to hire them.
To many, this sort of thing is transparent misogyny and racism – and that special combination of the two. But being obvious doesn’t mean it isn’t impactful; and it doesn’t come out of nowhere; it’s built on decades of undermining any intentional efforts to dismantle or even acknowledge the living history of structurally embedded white supremacy in this country.
Tim Wise on ‘DEI Hires,’ Keith McHenry on Criminalizing the Unhoused The right wing has gotten much more overt about their intention to defeat the prospect of multiracial democracy, as demonstrated by its latest weaponized trope—the “DEI hire.”
“Seventy-six percent of Americans say that they still trust their local news stations," the New Yorker reported. By hijacking this trusting relationship, Sinclair is able to sneak its propaganda into millions of American homes, including in presidential swing states where Sinclair owns more stations than any other network.
How Sinclair Sneaks Right-Wing Spin Into Millions of Households While millions of Americans are subjected to Sinclair’s electioneering, few know it. That’s because, like a chameleon, the TV network blends into the woodwork.
Ability and age shouldn’t be off the table as media topics during elections, but there are ways to have these conversations without promoting harm. Some common pitfalls to avoid include: stating or implying that all disabilities or conditions are inherent liabilities, even cognitive disabilities; diagnosing candidates without evidence; using illness or disability as a metaphor; conflating age with ability; conflating physical and cognitive health; using stigmatizing language to describe incapacities; and highlighting issues with ability or health without explaining why they are concerning.
When Does Concern About Presidential Fitness Become Media Ableism? Ability and age shouldn’t be off the table as media topics during elections, but there are ways to have these conversations without promoting harm.
Click here to claim your Sponsored Listing.
Our Story
Since 1986, FAIR has been monitoring corporate media to document bias, government influence and skewed reporting, while championing the efforts of independent journalism.
Videos (show all)
Category
Contact the business
Telephone
Website
Address
124 W 30th Street, Rm 201
New York, NY
10001
Opening Hours
Monday | 10am - 6pm |
Tuesday | 10am - 6pm |
Wednesday | 10am - 6pm |
Thursday | 10am - 6pm |
Friday | 10am - 6pm |
POBox 1830
New York, 10156
Welcome to the official page of ILW. Stay up-to-date with the latest immigration news.
2472 Broadway, #130
New York, 10025
Putting women in the headlines and the bylines since 2000. We are a 501c3 nonprofit news organization covering international news on women and girls. womensenews.org
1212 Avenue Of The Americas
New York, 10036
The Jesuit Review of Faith and Culture
New York
Manik Mag is an online plus size magazine geared toward contemporary women delivering the latest on
345 Hudson Street
New York, 10014
All the sports talk, interviews, game coverage and podcasts from the top personalities in sports. Alw
370 Lexington Avenue
New York, 10017
National multifamily real estate news magazine covering all aspects of the industry.
New York
Founded in 2008, TheFashionList™ is a news site that covers fashion from an insider's perspective.
New York
The official film archives of the Manhattan Chamber of Commerce 2008-2016
New York City
New York, 1019
Become a FAN, click on Like and get access to the world's biggest Wedding Magazine. Do you like us? S
611 Broadway, Suite 907D
New York, 10012
http://www.medcitynews.com https://twitter.com/medcitynews http://www.linkedin.com/company/medcity-ne
New York
24Shqip është vënë në kërkim të lajmit, me qëllimin e vetëm që të informojmë lexuesit, d