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How Corporate-Funded Propaganda Is Airing On Local Newscasts As "News"
A new study being released today by the Center for Media and Democracy found at least 77 TV stations around the country has aired corporate-sponsored video news releases over the past 10 months. The report accuses the TV stations actively disguise the content - which has been paid for by companies like General Motors, Panasonic and Pfizer -- to make it appear to be their own reporting. In a broadcast exclusive we speak with the authors of the report and air examples of the video news releases.
A new study being released today by the Center for Media and Democracy reveals that at least 77 TV stations around the country have been caught airing corporate-sponsored propaganda disguised as news news releases in the past 10 months. Companies funding the video news releases include General Motors, Intel and Pfizer.
The stations are scattered throughout 30 states and are affiliated with all of the major networks: ABC, CBS, NBC and Fox. And many of the stations are owned by some of the country's largest media companies including Clear Channel, News Corp, Viacom, the Tribune Company and Sinclair Broadcast.
The study by the Center for Media and Democracy is called "Fake TV News: Widespread and Undisclosed" [Read Report]. The authors of the report charge that these TV stations actively disguise the corporate-sponsored content to make it appear to be their own reporting.
Until now, television news directors have downplayed how often VNRs made it onto air. Last year Barbara Cochran, president of the Radio-Television News Directors Association, compared VNRs to the Loch Ness monster. She said "Everyone talks about it, but not many people have actually seen it."
Today we are going to spend the hour looking at how fake news is making its way onto the airwaves of local newscasts. We will speak with the authors of the report, as well as a consultant who has appeared in several video news releases [See Part II of DN's Fake TV News Special] and with FCC Commissioner Jonathan Adelstein [See Part III of DN's Fake TV News Special] who has said he was stunned by the findings of Fake TV News report.
But first we will air some examples of how video news releases are used.
Four weeks ago, the Fox affiliate in South Bend Indiana aired a video news release produced by the PR company Medialink for General Motors. The video was narrated by Medialink's Andrew Schmertz. When the VNR aired on March 16, the local anchor introduced Andrew as if he were a Fox reporter.
* WSJV broadcast
That video news release aired on WSJV in South Bend Indiana. The station's news director, Ed Kral, declined to join us on today's program. He described it as an accident that the VNR aired as it did.
The same VNR aired on two other stations: KOSA Channel 7 in Odessa Texas and WWTV Channel 9 in Cadillac Michigan.
None of the three stations divulged to listeners that the feature was produced by Medialink and funded by General Motors. In fact, of the 87 VNR broadcasts documented in the Fake TV News study, not once did the TV station specifically disclose who funded the VNR to the news audience.
Medialink also produced a video news release about ethanol, funded by the company Siemans which supplies automation systems to two-thirds of the ethanol plants in the country. Medialink sent a publicist named Kate Brookes to Iowa to act like a reporter covering the story.
Here is part of the original Video News Release that was distributed by Medialink in January.
* Video news release from Medialink
At least five stations then took that corporate-funded VNR and broadcasted it. KTNV Channel 13 in Las Vegas aired it on January 19th.
* Watch broadcast from KTNV
That video news release is one of the 36 VNRs highlighted in the new study by the Center for Media and Democracy called Fake TV News. The authors of the study, Diane Farsetta and Daniel Price, join us now in Washington for this broadcast exclusive interview. Welcome to Democracy Now!
* Diane Farsetta, senior researcher at the Center for Media and Democracy. She is co-author of the report, "Fake TV News: Widespread and Undisclosed"
* Daniel Price, co-author of the Center for Media and Democracy's report "Fake TV News: Widespread and Undisclosed."
LISTEN ONLINE:
http://www.democracynow.org/article.pl?sid=06/04/06/1432239
The stations are scattered throughout 30 states and are affiliated with all of the major networks: ABC, CBS, NBC and Fox. And many of the stations are owned by some of the country's largest media companies including Clear Channel, News Corp, Viacom, the Tribune Company and Sinclair Broadcast.
The study by the Center for Media and Democracy is called "Fake TV News: Widespread and Undisclosed" [Read Report]. The authors of the report charge that these TV stations actively disguise the corporate-sponsored content to make it appear to be their own reporting.
Until now, television news directors have downplayed how often VNRs made it onto air. Last year Barbara Cochran, president of the Radio-Television News Directors Association, compared VNRs to the Loch Ness monster. She said "Everyone talks about it, but not many people have actually seen it."
Today we are going to spend the hour looking at how fake news is making its way onto the airwaves of local newscasts. We will speak with the authors of the report, as well as a consultant who has appeared in several video news releases [See Part II of DN's Fake TV News Special] and with FCC Commissioner Jonathan Adelstein [See Part III of DN's Fake TV News Special] who has said he was stunned by the findings of Fake TV News report.
But first we will air some examples of how video news releases are used.
Four weeks ago, the Fox affiliate in South Bend Indiana aired a video news release produced by the PR company Medialink for General Motors. The video was narrated by Medialink's Andrew Schmertz. When the VNR aired on March 16, the local anchor introduced Andrew as if he were a Fox reporter.
* WSJV broadcast
That video news release aired on WSJV in South Bend Indiana. The station's news director, Ed Kral, declined to join us on today's program. He described it as an accident that the VNR aired as it did.
The same VNR aired on two other stations: KOSA Channel 7 in Odessa Texas and WWTV Channel 9 in Cadillac Michigan.
None of the three stations divulged to listeners that the feature was produced by Medialink and funded by General Motors. In fact, of the 87 VNR broadcasts documented in the Fake TV News study, not once did the TV station specifically disclose who funded the VNR to the news audience.
Medialink also produced a video news release about ethanol, funded by the company Siemans which supplies automation systems to two-thirds of the ethanol plants in the country. Medialink sent a publicist named Kate Brookes to Iowa to act like a reporter covering the story.
Here is part of the original Video News Release that was distributed by Medialink in January.
* Video news release from Medialink
At least five stations then took that corporate-funded VNR and broadcasted it. KTNV Channel 13 in Las Vegas aired it on January 19th.
* Watch broadcast from KTNV
That video news release is one of the 36 VNRs highlighted in the new study by the Center for Media and Democracy called Fake TV News. The authors of the study, Diane Farsetta and Daniel Price, join us now in Washington for this broadcast exclusive interview. Welcome to Democracy Now!
* Diane Farsetta, senior researcher at the Center for Media and Democracy. She is co-author of the report, "Fake TV News: Widespread and Undisclosed"
* Daniel Price, co-author of the Center for Media and Democracy's report "Fake TV News: Widespread and Undisclosed."
LISTEN ONLINE:
http://www.democracynow.org/article.pl?sid=06/04/06/1432239
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Local KRON and KCBS TV News Is Bought and You Are Sold Down the River
Fri, Apr 7, 2006 11:06AM
ADELSTEIN SEEKS PROBE OF VIDEO NEWS RELEASES
Fri, Apr 7, 2006 11:03AM
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