 |
Unveiling the SourceWho's behind the curtain?

Before you accept any information at face value, be sure to notice:
who is the publisher (i.e. the source)
-
take note of the sponsor (oftentimes the owner of the publisher)
- find out who is paying for the dissemination of the information. Identifying a sponsor takes some digging, but it can be worthwhile, and sometimes surprising.
Here are some examples of sponsors of popular sources.
You may be surprised to learn that:
-
the NBC network is owned by General Electric, a company that makes both electric lamps and aircraft engines.
- If NBC reports on the aircraft industry, should we question their bias?
|
Source |
Sponsor |
Principal Concern |
Responsible Party (Sponsor's Leader) |
Location |
|
NBC |
80%-owned by GE, 20% controlled by Vivendi Universal |
electrical appliances, aircraft engines and engine parts, television broadcasting |
Jeffrey Immelt, Chairman of the Board & C.E.O., General Electric Corp. |
USA |
|
Lancet |
subscribers, advertisers |
medicine and health |
Richard Horton, Editor, Lancet |
UK |
|
Fox |
News Corp |
newspaper, periodical, TV, cable, and motion picture publishing |
Rupert Murdoch, Chairman of the Board, C.E.O. & Subsidiary Officer, News Corp |
Originally, Australia. As of 2004, USA. |
|
GAO
(Government Accountability Office) |
US taxpayers |
oversight of public funds |
David M. Walker, Comptroller General, USA |
USA |
|
CNN |
Time Warner |
motion picture and video production, cable networks |
Richard Parsons, C.E.O., Time Warner |
USA |
|
PBS |
Member stations that are funded by listeners, viewers, and corporate sponsors, and by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB). CPB is funded by US taxpayers. |
public television and radio programming |
Cheryl Halpern, Chairman, CPB Board of Directors |
USA |
|
JAMA
(Journal of the American Medical Association) |
American Medical Association, subscribers, advertisers |
medicine and health |
William G. Plested III, President, American Medical Association |
USA |
Next>
<Back
|