Media News
Democracy Now!
Among the dead was twenty-three-year-old Fadel Shana, a cameraman for the Reuters news agency. He was killed when an Israeli tank shell struck his clearly marked jeep. Shana was filming at the time of his death. Reuters released the video from his camera. It shows the shell being fired from a distance and then moments later the camera goes black. Reuters editor-in-chief David Schlesinger called Shana’s ...
The BBC as an Imperial Tool?
Thursday, April 10th, 2008
Stephen Lendman
RINF Alternative News
At a time of growing public disenchantment with the major media, millions now rely on alternate sources. Many online and print ones are credible. One of the world's most relied on is not - the BBC. It's an imperial tool, as corrupted as its dominant counterparts, been around longer than all of them, now in it for profit, and it's vital that people know who BBC ...
AP photographer wins amnesty from Iraqi panel
Wednesday, April 9th, 2008
AP
BAGHDAD - An Iraqi judicial committee has dismissed terrorism-related allegations against Associated Press photographer Bilal Hussein and ordered him released nearly two years after he was detained by the U.S. military.
A decision by a four-judge panel said Hussein's case falls under a new amnesty law. It ordered Iraqi courts to "cease legal proceedings" and ruled that Hussein should be "immediately" released unless other accusations are pending.
The ruling is dated Monday ...
Breaking Through the News Filter
Tuesday, April 8th, 2008
Peter Chamberlin
If it is true that the power belongs to the people in America, and Congress still answers to the people, then what force prevents the people from rising up to demand that Congress answer to the people's will? The answer to that question is that the "silent majority" is only silent because they have been ...
Media Tells People To Drink Soda Not Water
Friday, April 4th, 2008
As proof that mainstream health information continutes to become increasingly detached from reality, the mainstream media (MSM) has launched a new wave of misinformation designed to discredit the health benefits of drinking water! Just today, for example, Fox News ran a story entitled, Skip the Water, Have a Soda Instead. ((http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,345...)
Other news organizations, such as the Chicago Tribune also jumped on the bandwagon, declaring that drinking eight glasses ...
Adbusters’ Ads Busted
Friday, April 4th, 2008
By James H. Ewert Jr.
Kalle Lasn is a fighter for the right to communicate. A privilege, says the founder of Adbusters magazine, that goes one step farther than the freedom of speech.
“You can stand on the corner and shout at people as they are going by,” Lasn says. “But if a handful of corporations have media in their pocket, they can totally hoodwink the public.”
From his home in ...
Military Report: Secretly ‘Recruit or Hire Bloggers’
Wednesday, April 2nd, 2008
A study, written for U.S. Special Operations Command, suggested "clandestinely recruiting or hiring prominent bloggers." Since the start of the Iraq war, there's been a raucous debate in military circles over how to handle blogs -- and the servicemembers who want to keep them. One faction sees blogs as security risks, and a collective waste of troops' time. The other (which includes top officers, like Gen. David Petraeus ...
Where Was Media When Sub-Prime Disaster Unfolded?
Tuesday, April 1st, 2008
"It is somewhat surprising," Larry Elliott, economics editor of London's The Guardian observed recently, "that there is not already rioting in the streets, given the gigantic fraud perpetrated by the financial elite at the expense of ordinary Americans.” If such a fraud was taking place, and if Wall Street’s financial crisis, according to the usually staid Economist, was on the edge of “disaster” with a “financial nuclear winter” ...
Why the Government doesn’t care what you think
Friday, March 28th, 2008
"All the more reason for us to elect the right person come November -- so that in four years, we don't run the risk of seeing someone from the next administration yawn in the public's face."
People were shocked last Wednesday, on the fifth anniversary of the Iraq war, to hear Vice President Cheney say "So?" in response to ABC News reporter Martha Raddatz's questions about public opposition to the ...
Media should press candidates on open government
Thursday, March 20th, 2008
WASHINGTON — At a time of continued government secrecy, the news media should press the presidential candidates on whether their administration would enforce "the spirit as well as the letter of the law" protecting the public's right to know, says Associated Press President and CEO Tom Curley.
"Secrecy is one of the handiest tools for government that wants to be accountable only to itself regardless of the spirit of any law," ...
Tabloid Fabricated Heathrow Plot
Thursday, March 20th, 2008
Evening Standard condemned by press watchdog for coverage of the Camp for Climate Action's Heathrow protest. Claim of fabrication upheld.
In a much awaited ruling the Press Complaints Commission (PCC) issued a stinging rebuke against the Evening Standard today. The usually mild- mannered PCC slammed the Standard's coverage of last summer's Camp for Climate Action at ...
BBC journalists arrested in Irish probe
Monday, March 17th, 2008
Four BBC journalists were arrested at the weekend by Irish police monitoring the Real IRA, the dissident group responsible for intermittent violence in Northern Ireland.
The four were among 11 men arrested and held for questioning by Gardai in three separate police stations in the border county of Donegal.
It is believed the journalists were working for the BBC's Panorama and BBC Northern Ireland's Spotlight investigative programmes. Seven of the arrests were ...
Ex-Drug Sales Rep Exposes All
Friday, March 14th, 2008
Former Eli Lilly Rep Says He Wined and Dined Doctors to Make a Sale
To sell their drugs, pharmaceutical companies hire former cheerleaders and ex-models to wine and dine doctors, exaggerate the drug's benefits and underplay their side-effects, a former sales rep told a Congressional committee this morning.
Shahram Ahari, who spent two years selling Prozac and Zypraxa for Eli Lily, told a Senate Aging Committee chaired by Sen. Herb Kohl, D-Wisc., ...
Public, media losing sight of Iraq, study finds
Friday, March 14th, 2008
Only 28 percent know that nearly 4,000 U.S. troops have been killed
Twenty-eight percent of the public is aware that nearly 4,000 U.S. personnel have died in Iraq over the past five years, while nearly half thinks the death tally is 3,000 or fewer and 23 percent think it is higher, according to an opinion survey released yesterday.
The survey, by the Pew Research Center for the People ...
Israel to boycott Al-Jazeera
Thursday, March 13th, 2008
Israel will boycott Al-Jazeera over what it calls the channel's 'biased coverage' of the regime's military operation in Gaza.
The regime's foreign ministry has held discussions on the matter and decided to impose an official embargo on the Qatar-based station in the coming days, deputy foreign minister Majali Wahbe told Army Radio on Wednesday.
The ministry claimed that Al-Jazeera, in cooperation with Hamas, is inciting the ...















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