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10 votes
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The Washington Post is the latest mainstream media outlet to dedicate resources to covering games. Past efforts at other publications have failed—why is this time going to be different?
10 votes -
Why can’t we agree on what’s true any more?
18 votes -
'Everything you're seeing is deception.' How right-wing media talks about impeachment
18 votes -
Vox Media acquires New York Magazine
15 votes -
The lies behind Area 51
5 votes -
Andrew Yang gets media cold shoulder
19 votes -
Greta Thunberg has spoken about her Asperger's syndrome diagnosis after she was criticised over the condition
11 votes -
Donald Trump, QAnon and an impending judgment day: Behind the Facebook-fueled rise of The Epoch Times
11 votes -
Free speech tropes - Common misstatements, misconceptions, and bad arguments about the First Amendment in American media
9 votes -
Forty rebuttals to the media’s smears of Julian Assange – by someone who was actually there
8 votes -
I was skeptical of unions. Then I joined one.
9 votes -
Climate deniers get more media play than scientists: study
News article: Climate deniers get more media play than scientists: study Study: Discrepancy in scientific authority and media visibility of climate change scientists and contrarians
12 votes -
Denmark broadcaster uses meme-based journalism to reach younger audience
7 votes -
The mental health zine giving the power back to patients
5 votes -
NY Times public editor: The readers versus the masthead
11 votes -
Pacific Standard is shutting down, effective next Friday
10 votes -
What actual resistance looks like: Glenn Greenwald, David Miranda, and Brazilian journalists are standing up to a hateful fascistic government
10 votes -
USA Today's Virginia HQ was evacuated amid a heavy police response due to a mistaken report of a person with a weapon
6 votes -
Flygskam – Is Sweden's no-fly movement just media hype?
7 votes -
What kind of climate change coverage do you read in the news? It depends on whether you live in a rich country or a poor one
6 votes -
What the media get wrong in coverage of LGBTQ politicians
5 votes -
Gay Star News is closing: a letter from the founders, Tris Reid-Smith and Scott Nunn
8 votes -
Journalists often withhold details of mass shooters and suicides to discourage copycats. Should that “strategic silence” be extended to extremist speech, misinformation, and propaganda, too?
10 votes -
Do you live in a media bubble? Do you use Google News? I recommend using it signed-out at least 50% of the time
I recently started jumping around various browsers and machines. I sometimes keep instinctually going to Google News in all of these environments. I am often signed-out in these other browsers....
I recently started jumping around various browsers and machines. I sometimes keep instinctually going to Google News in all of these environments. I am often signed-out in these other browsers. This has been an eye-opening experience for me.
Many years ago I had blocked Fox, RT, and other crap out of my GNews feed. I was living in a bubble of my own making. I actually prefer that bubble, as there is more factual information in it, but it comes at a cost. I had lost a lot of my situational awareness of the political and media climate.
I am not trying to be centrist here, I just think that one should know the entire battlefield, not just the news given from their comfortable sources. For one thing, I had no idea of the dominance which Fox News had in Google News, also that RT was so prevalent, also that there was so many other sources of utter right-wing propaganda that had been normalized. How can I fight disinformation if I am unaware of its origins?
What do you think about this? Would you take me up on my challenge of reading the uncustomised news? Do you ever try to get out of your comfort zone in the news? Does it help inform you?
edit: Just FYI, to easily use Google News, or any other news site signed-out, first open a "private window" in your browser.
14 votes -
There's an underground economy selling links from The New York Times, BBC, CNN, and other big news sites
12 votes -
Seeing yourself (BPD in the media)
6 votes -
How to cover 11,250 elections at once: Here’s how The Washington Post’s new computational journalism lab will tackle 2020
9 votes -
Motion smoothing is ruining cinema
25 votes -
Plex makes piracy just another streaming service
20 votes -
Media frame: Fentanyl panic is worsening the overdose crisis
5 votes -
A female historian wrote a book. Two male historians went on NPR to talk about it. They never mentioned her name. It’s Sarah Milov.
20 votes -
Media literacy and game news
5 votes -
After urging land reform I now know the brute power of our billionaire press
17 votes -
Media frame: A ‘war on cops’ narrative without evidence
8 votes -
Fox News didn't "steal" your parents
19 votes -
You can sue media companies over Facebook comments from readers, Australian court rules
13 votes -
The lack of dedicated LGBTQ media is a disaster
9 votes -
Severe weather pits meteorologists against some viewers
5 votes -
What international coverage of Tiananmen got wrong
9 votes -
How Bret Stephens and Bari Weiss have taken the NY Times’ campus concern trolling to new heights in just two years
4 votes -
It's time to change the way the media covers crime
9 votes -
Lil Nas X's "Old Town Road", the media echo chamber, and Shane Morris’s vile past
12 votes -
Finland is winning the war on fake news. What it’s learned may be crucial to Western democracy
23 votes -
The Hitler industrial complex: Why Hitler is everywhere
5 votes -
The long tail
6 votes -
Should the media quit Facebook?
3 votes -
“We’re drinking now”: The oldest newspaper in New Orleans just fired its entire staff
11 votes -
Steve Bannon caught on video admitting Breitbart lost 90% of advertising revenue due to boycott
21 votes -
The first ever World Health Organisation physical activity guidelines for under-fives, recommend no screen time for one-year-olds and no more than an hour for two- to-four-year-olds
An article on a parenting website: Guidance recommends no screen time for under-twos An article in Time magazine: World Health Organization Issues First-Ever Screen Time Guidelines for Young Kids....
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An article on a parenting website: Guidance recommends no screen time for under-twos
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An article in Time magazine: World Health Organization Issues First-Ever Screen Time Guidelines for Young Kids. Here's What to Know
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The WHO's press release: To grow up healthy, children need to sit less and play more
26 votes -