1997 60 min 1-893521-56-7

The Myth of the Liberal Media

The Propaganda Model of News
Featuring Edward Herman & Noam Chomsky

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Synopsis

If you think U.S. news has a liberal bias, this assumption-shattering film from Noam Chomsky, Edward Herman, and Justin Lewis will have you thinking again. Making the common-sense case that mainstream news media are more committed to their bottom-line interests as large corporations than to left-wing advocacy, they dissect how news content gets shaped within a narrow, and ultimately conservative, institutional frame that marginalizes the progressive perspectives of a broad cross-section of the American public. The film, made before the rise of Fox News, has become only more relevant with time.

""If you want to understand the way a system works, you look at its institutional structure. How it is organized, how it is controlled, how it is funded."" - Noam Chomsky

""The Mainstream media really represent elite interests, and what the propaganda model tries to do is stipulate a set of institutional variables, reflecting this elite power, that very powerfully influence the media."" - Edward Herman

The Propaganda Model & Agenda Setting | The Ownership Filter | The Advertising Filter | The Newsmakers Filter | The News Shapers Filter | The Flak Filter | The Attack on the Welfare State | The Attack on Social Security | The Attack on Health Care | Labor & Business | Anti-Communism & The Free Market | Anti-Communism & The Free Market: Russia | Anti-Communism & The Free Market: Cuba | Dictators & Democracy | Dictators & Democracy: Saddam Hussein | Dictators & Democracy: Suharto

Release Date:1997
Duration:60 min
ISBN:1-893521-56-7

Trailers

Watch the trailer

Filmmaker Credits

Producer, Director
Sut Jhally
Line Producer, Editor
Katherine Sender
Assistant Editor
Sanjay Talreja

Film Festivals

2010 PSBT Open Frame (New Delhi)

Resources: Downloads and Related Links

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Praise

"Demonstrates how ownership of the press and pressure from advertisers filter the news and limit journalists."
Peace Review: A Journal of Social Justice