How Middle East Outlets Reframe the News To Fit Their Narrative
Changing phrases to be for or against Israel is part of the job.
Changing phrases to be for or against Israel is part of the job.
How cable TV transformed politics—and how politics transformed cable TV
NPR is no Xinhua, but Elon Musk is correct that it doesn't need government subsidies.
Major Fox talk show hosts knew that Trump's claims of a stolen election were false, but chose not to say so on air, for fear it would anger their audience.
On Tuesday night, Trump spokesperson Liz Harrington made the baffling claim that, if mainstream news channels failed to air the former president's campaign announcement in full, it would mean that "we do not have the First Amendment."
Advertisers found that appeasing an illiberal mob wasn’t a safe choice after all.
Plus: Israel boycott bill divides Democrats, Cyntoia Brown gets clemency, and the "skills gap" was a lie.
Ajit Pai notes that his agency has no authority to consider journalistic content in making license decisions.
The TV newsman looks back on his career at 20/20 and Fox News, and talks about the future of video.