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7 votes
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What are the main news sources in your country?
Here in Brazil we have: Globo, the generic "centrist"/neoliberal TV news outlet. Used subtle methods of backing a right-wing candidate in the 90s who then ruined the Brazilian economy and...
Here in Brazil we have:
Globo, the generic "centrist"/neoliberal TV news outlet. Used subtle methods of backing a right-wing candidate in the 90s who then ruined the Brazilian economy and (apparently) massively exaggerated the Car Wash operation, even if Lula did something wrong.
Record, which is owned by the largest evangelical Church here and I'd imagine is often a mouthpiece for them.
Cultura, which is the only traditional news outlet here that can actually be called left-leaning, and I don't think they are as ostensibly "moderate" as the American news outlets, which is good.
Band, which is the one all about showing all the crime all the time, presumably to justify the law and order policies as opposed to welfare to it's viewers.
From here we have various (mostly but not entirely) right-wing and religious 'news' channels.
Online there are news outlets like Nexo, El País (for Brazil) and the international news outlets which will occasionally cover the big Brazilian news stories, but I don't think most of them are very popular, at least among most people who, for how divided we are, aren't that political, especially if you aren't a Bolsonarist or Leftist.
14 votes -
Scale was the god that failed
10 votes -
Who buys porn magazines anymore? We asked the editor of one.
11 votes -
When did writing in major newspapers become so bad?
9 votes -
No, Mr Potato Head is not going gender neutral
@farhad manjoo: press release vs reporting. what happened here? They are not at all making it gender neutral. Did they make a quick change or did all the reports get it very wrong? pic.twitter.com/sMPGswjknA
5 votes -
'This used to be your favourite show': Polish media falls silent to protest tax
6 votes -
Furniture giant IKEA has announced it will stop printing its traditional catalogue, one of the world's biggest annual publications, after seventy years
10 votes -
Spotify claims it’s dominating the podcasting market because of a million-plus tiny podcasts
8 votes -
Matt Taibbi: Hate Inc., Why today's media makes us despise one another (Hosted by PennState)
6 votes -
BuzzFeed to acquire HuffPost in multi-year partnership with Verizon Media
10 votes -
Do you read 'old news'/article archives?
Asked because I like the idea of reading about the past and feel unsatisfied by r/history and r/askhistorians mainly because reddit's search isn't that great and those subs have a much wider scope...
Asked because I like the idea of reading about the past and feel unsatisfied by r/history and r/askhistorians mainly because reddit's search isn't that great and those subs have a much wider scope than most news archives.
I'm gonna do this on a Q&A format. Note that "old news" doesn't need to be news articles, it can be blogs for example.
If you read old news/articles, where do you get them from/find them?
What kind of "old news" do you read?
What historical period do you tend to read about?
If you're reading an article about a historical event you remember, how does your memory tend to compare to those articles?
How often do you do it?
What do you think about subreddits like r/twentyyearsago, since they're basically trawling through those news archives?
7 votes -
Anti-Rupert Murdoch petition wins record support in Australia
9 votes -
Twitter won’t let the New York Post tweet until it agrees to behave itself
13 votes -
If you read any news sources/publications for more specific/alternative subjects, what are they?
Tl;dr typical news sources tend to prioritize political and governmental events and the things that surround them, like economics and social issues, even if they cover everything, and by covering...
Tl;dr typical news sources tend to prioritize political and governmental events and the things that surround them, like economics and social issues, even if they cover everything, and by covering everything they probably stretch themselves thinly among what they don't prioritize. (At least that's how it feels.)
A few examples of what I'm thinking of are:
Foreign Affairs, who focus specifically on geopolitics
The Scientific American, which focuses specifically on... science.
Aeon, which seems to focus on "the humanities". (
vaaague.)So... what are your examples of news sources/publications like this that you follow?
8 votes -
Facebook and Twitter take unusual steps to limit spread of New York Post story
16 votes -
Denmark confronts sexual harassment at work – more than 1,600 women have signed an open letter alleging the problem is rife in Danish media
7 votes -
Ultra Strips Down is a Danish children's TV show that aims to counter a social media that bombards young people with images of perfect bodies
13 votes -
The refined sociopathy of The Economist
25 votes -
A robot wrote this entire article. Are you scared yet, human?
21 votes -
Fox News urged to fire Tucker Carlson for defending Kenosha shooter Kyle Rittenhouse
18 votes -
The historical amnesia of culture warriors
7 votes -
A newsroom at the edge of autocracy; The South China Morning Post is arguably the world’s most important newspaper for what it tells us about media freedoms as China’s power grows
7 votes -
QAF: A Chinese fan-forum that's grown into a hub for volunteers subtitling foreign LGBTIQ media and a support community
8 votes -
There are so many coronavirus myths that even Snopes can’t keep up
10 votes -
Slate Star Codex and Silicon Valley’s war against the media
16 votes -
Australian Associated Press sells the AAP Newswire
6 votes -
Latest $84 million cuts rip the heart out of the ABC, and Australia's democracy
11 votes -
America needs a ministry of (actual) truth
10 votes -
Podcast discussions & recommendations! What are you listening to?
Tildes has had a couple of threads about podcast recommendations in the past, but most of them are over 18 months old now, and podcasts are always evolving, and we have new members who may not...
Tildes has had a couple of threads about podcast recommendations in the past, but most of them are over 18 months old now, and podcasts are always evolving, and we have new members who may not have participated in those threads before—I certainly only picked up podcasts in the last few months.
So. Three questions!
- What podcasts are you listening to?
- What podcasts have you dropped, or picked up, in that time?
- If you had to recommend a couple of podcasts to others, which shows would you pick? Why do you recommend them? Got a favourite episode?
28 votes -
The American press is destroying itself
6 votes -
Fox News runs digitally altered images in coverage of Seattle’s protests, Capitol Hill Autonomous Zone
41 votes -
Facebook and Google refuse to pay revenue to Australian media
10 votes -
Critics warn of multimedia 'hell' (1995)
9 votes -
The design of the “Incalculable Loss” front page of The New York Times for Memorial Day, 2020
14 votes -
New and different: How to consume news in this or any catastrophe
7 votes -
No, NASA didn't find a parallel universe where time runs backward
13 votes -
America’s largest media labor union launches historic advocacy campaign to save industry: "having robust news operations at the local and state level is fundamentally good for democratic stability."
12 votes -
At first, the disappearance of the wife of one of Norway's richest people seemed to be an abduction – but then suspicion turned on the husband
7 votes -
“Immune to evidence”: How dangerous coronavirus conspiracies spread
7 votes -
A spectacularly bad Washington Post story on Apple and Google’s exposure notification project
3 votes -
Philippines largest TV network ABS-CBN ordered shut
11 votes -
Finland enlists social influencers in fight against Covid-19 – government advice sent to bloggers, rappers and writers to get to those not reached by traditional media
5 votes -
Top story on Fox News right now: "His denial..... was deadly"
6 votes -
How Fox News gets other cable news channels to push their stories
8 votes -
Are social networks polarizing? A Q&A with Ezra Klein | The Interface with Casey Newton, Issue #464, Feb 27
5 votes -
Disney CEO Bob Iger steps down in surprise announcement
18 votes -
US to treat Chinese state media like an arm of Beijing's government
15 votes -
How could we regulate biased/lying media outlets and aggregators without encroaching on good ones?
I find this to be a pretty important question when news organizations like Fox News are literally aiming to help the Republican Party to stay on power, CNN and MSNBC promote centrist candidates...
I find this to be a pretty important question when news organizations like Fox News are literally aiming to help the Republican Party to stay on power, CNN and MSNBC promote centrist candidates and media aggregators ranging from r/the_donald to r/chapotraphouse banning anyone who opposes them. Thing is, these are the most well known examples. How could we tell faulty media sources and aggregators apart from good ones in mass? Do you think that's possible?
15 votes -
Trapped in Iran
7 votes