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Newsmax's Dick Morris urges viewers to buy shares of the network, saying Trump is "going to be working very closely with Newsmax because he has no choice"
Morris: “If you want to know what Trump is doing in the middle of this revolution of <...
Media Matters
4 days ago
Why the i paper won't be endorsing anyone in 2024 - or ever
Only one national newspaper has never supported a political party. readers trust us to tell it straight. Earlier this month, Press Gazette a...
The i newspaper online iNews
3 days ago
Mar 3, 2004 · Widely acclaimed and hotly contested, veteran journalist Eric Alterman's ambitious investigation into the true nature of the U.S. news media touched a nerve and sparked debate across the country.
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- Eric Alterman
Jan 1, 2003 · Alterman, a self-described liberal, explores the various methods of news media--radio, television, and print--and sites specific examples of a conservative point of view being expressed in all three. To the point that there is much more of a conservative, than a liberal, bias in media.
Jul 29, 2010 · Refuting the claim that mainstream media has a liberal slant, the author exposes the fallacy of a left-wing conspiracy, arguing that it is corporate news structure that determines what the public sees and hears in broadcast or print media
They mean the media that's located in Washington, in New York, a little bit in L.A., maybe some in Boston, Seattle, and the media that basically defines the political agenda for the rest of the country. Most Americans disagree with people in this room.
- Eric Alterman
- 2003
What Liberal Media?: The Truth About Bias and the News is a book by columnist Eric Alterman that challenges the widespread conservative belief in a liberal media bias. Alterman argues that the media, as a whole, is not biased liberally, but conservatively.
Journalist and historian Eric Alterman begs to differ." "What Liberal Media? confronts the question of liberal bias and, in so doing, provides a sharp and utterly convincing assessment of the...
Dec 17, 2008 · As the question of whose interests the media protects-and how-continues to raise hackles, Alterman’s sharp, utterly convincing assessment cuts through the cloud of inflammatory rhetoric, settling the question of liberal bias in the news once and for all.