#Sinclair Broadcast forces right wing propaganda into your news
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Keep in mind who owns the media you read. Specifically, Sinclair Broadcasting Group, closely aligned with Trump and the Republican Party for decades, now owns or controls 200-plus local television stations around the country which is why TV news has become more right-leaning and why the same story is on every station—like the ubiquitous coverage of Biden’s age without mention of Trump’s cognitive fitness, and regularly promotes lies and propaganda. Starting in 2023 Sinclair reportedly began ceasing most or all local news broadcasts, starting with 10 stations in different cities and states around the country, and replacing them with ‘The National Desk’, a program which spreads right-wing misinformation
In early 2024, Sinclair magnate David D. Smith purchased The Baltimore Sun newspaper, despite already owning nearly 200 local TV stations. Employees of the Sun have not been happy
at some point we gotta acknowledge that getting the majority of your news and takes and general opinions from tumblr is not meaningfully different than getting it from tiktok even though on here it's in textual form. understanding the world through the lens of viral videos vs understanding it through breathless unsourced text posts written by dykeastarion69
#sinclair broadcast group inc#Sinclair Broadcast forces right wing propaganda into your news#keep an eye on where your news comes from#media literacy is important
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I found this on NewsBreak: Top Sinclair Anchor Confirms He Quit Over Station’s ‘Right-Wing Propaganda’
I found this on NewsBreak: Top Sinclair Anchor Confirms He Quit Over Station’s ‘Right-Wing Propaganda’
If the news station you use to get your news is owned by Sinclair, both TV or radio, just beware they will have a right wing bias!
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The misinformation is still ongoing.
I saw a post on here the other day about that video of Sinclair owned stations.
About how Sinclair owned stations made their anchors read an identical script bashing MSNBC and CNN and CBS (none of those stations in the video are owned by the major outlets, they are owned by Sinclair. The logos in the corner - of those more familiar large brands - are because they are affiliate stations, they are paying NBC, CBS, ABC etc for the right to put that logo there and are not owned by them).
Yet the post I saw on here with that video attached had it framed as if it is the major large networks creating propaganda against the smaller local news stations.... which is literally the exact opposite of what is happening in that video.
What we are seeing in that video is a right-wing media company that swooped in and purchased as many small local news stations across the country that they could, and is now forcing them to read a script that bashes all news sources outside of right-wing control.
Yet it is so easy to foist a narrative onto things like that on this site and others, regardless of what is actually going on, which is very much the exact problem.
Given what I am talking about specifically, here are some sources, so you know I’m not just creating spin here or editorializing about what that video showed:
https://theconcourse.deadspin.com/how-americas-largest-local-tv-owner-turned-its-news-anc-1824233490
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/04/02/business/media/sinclair-news-anchors-script.html
http://abcnews.go.com/US/trump-defends-sinclair-media-company-takes-fire-false/story?id=54174966
https://www.usatoday.com/story/money/media/2018/04/02/sinclair-defends-itself-over-uproar-after-local-news-anchors-read-anti-false-news-screed/477531002/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_stations_owned_or_operated_by_Sinclair_Broadcast_Group
https://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/plum-line/wp/2018/04/02/why-trumps-support-for-sinclair-broadcasting-is-so-concerning/
https://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/erik-wemple/wp/2018/04/02/the-real-problem-with-sinclairs-fake-news-script/?tid=pm_opinions_pop
https://www.seattlepi.com/seattlenews/article/KOMO-fake-news-Sinclair-promos-12792032.php
http://money.cnn.com/2018/04/01/media/sinclair-anchor-promos/index.html
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GvtNyOzGogc (This is a John Oliver segment explaining what Sinclair Broadcasting is)
https://twitter.com/realDonaldTrump/status/980799183425802240
Basically, and I know I keep saying this over and over and over again, don’t believe everything you read on tumblr, and please please don’t use this site as your primary news source.
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How America's Largest Local TV Owner Turned Its News Anchors Into Soldiers In Trump's War On The Media by Timothy Burke
Sinclair's Synchronized Fake News Broadcast Goes Viral.
Earlier this month, CNN’s Brian Stelter broke the news that Sinclair Broadcast Group, owner or operator of nearly 200 television stations in the U.S., would be forcing its news anchors to record a promo about “the troubling trend of irresponsible, one sided news stories plaguing our country.” The script, which parrots Donald Trump’s oft-declarations of developments negative to his presidency as “fake news,” brought upheaval to newsrooms already dismayed with Sinclair’s consistent interference to bring right-wing propaganda to local television broadcasts.
You might remember Sinclair from its having been featured on John Oliver’s Last Week Tonight last year, or from its requiring in 2004 of affiliates to air anti-John Kerry propaganda, or perhaps because it’s your own local affiliate running inflammatory “Terrorism Alerts” or required editorials from former Trump adviser Boris Epshteyn, he of the famed Holocaust Remembrance Day statement that failed to mention Jewish people. (Sinclair also owns Ring of Honor wrestling, Tennis magazine, and the Tennis Channel.)
The net result of the company’s current mandate is dozens upon dozens of local news anchors looking like hostages in proof-of-life videos, trying their hardest to spit out words attacking the industry they’d chosen as a life vocation.
Not that any of it matters to Sinclair, which, with the help of a friendly federal government, is about to swallow up another 40 television stations—increasing its reach and its lead over competitors like Hearst and Scripps. The script, as transcribed by ThinkProgress based on the KOMO (Seattle) version, reads:
Hi, I’m(A) ____________, and I’m (B) _________________…
(B) Our greatest responsibility is to serve our Northwest communities. We are extremely proud of the quality, balanced journalism that KOMO News produces.
(A) But we’re concerned about the troubling trend of irresponsible, one sided news stories plaguing our country. The sharing of biased and false news has become all too common on social media.
(B) More alarming, some media outlets publish these same fake stories… stories that just aren’t true, without checking facts first.
(A) Unfortunately, some members of the media use their platforms to push their own personal bias and agenda to control ‘exactly what people think’…This is extremely dangerous to a democracy.
(B) At KOMO it’s our responsibility to pursue and report the truth. We understand Truth is neither politically ‘left nor right.’ Our commitment to factual reporting is the foundation of our credibility, now more than ever.
(A) But we are human and sometimes our reporting might fall short. If you believe our coverage is unfair please reach out to us by going to KOMOnews.com and clicking on CONTENT CONCERNS. We value your comments. We will respond back to you.
(B) We work very hard to seek the truth and strive to be fair, balanced and factual… We consider it our honor, our privilege to responsibly deliver the news every day.
(A) Thank you for watching and we appreciate your feedback.
For a list of stations owned or operated by Sinclair Broadcast Group, check here. E.G.:
If you’re a Sinclair employee who has something to say—anonymity guaranteed on request. Use this anonymous SecureDrop.
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How America's Largest Local TV Owner Turned Its News Anchors Into Soldiers In Trump's War On The Media
Earlier this month, CNN’s Brian Stelter broke the news that Sinclair Broadcast Group, owner or operator of nearly 200 television stations in the U.S., would be forcing its news anchors to record a promo about “the troubling trend of irresponsible, one sided news stories plaguing our country.” The script, which parrots Donald Trump’s oft-declarations of developments negative to his presidency as “fake news,” brought upheaval to newsrooms already dismayed with Sinclair’s consistent interference to bring right-wing propaganda to local television broadcasts.
You might remember Sinclair from its having been featured on John Oliver’sLast Week Tonight last year, or from its requiring in 2004 of affiliates to air anti-John Kerry propaganda, or perhaps because it’s your own local affiliate running inflammatory “Terrorism Alerts” or required editorials from former Trump adviser Boris Epshteyn, he of the famed Holocaust Remembrance Day statement that failed to mention Jewish people. (Sinclair also owns Ring of Honor wrestling, Tennis magazine, and the Tennis Channel.)
The net result of the company’s current mandate is dozens upon dozens of local news anchors looking like hostages in proof-of-life videos, trying their hardest to spit out words attacking the industry they’d chosen as a life vocation.
Not that any of it matters to Sinclair, which, with the help of a friendly federal government, is about to swallow up another 40 television stations—increasing its reach and its lead over competitors like Hearst and Scripps. The script, as transcribed by ThinkProgress based on the KOMO (Seattle) version, reads:
Source
#Donald Trump#Fake News#Propaganda#Misleading News#Misinformation#Politics#Conservative Media#Republicans#Sinclair#Local News Outlets
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The Most Uncomfortable Thing About Sinclair’s Move Into Sports Is That Nothing Will Change
The American flag is unfurled at Coors Field on April 4, 2014 in Denver, Colorado. Photo: Doug Pensinger/Getty Images
Last Friday, one of the biggest questions in the insular, usually quite-boring world of sports media was finally answered when 21 regional sports networks, or RSNs, spanning from Los Angeles to Minnesota to New Orleans to Miami, were at last sold. The fate of these networks had been up in the air since the Justice Department ruling that, in the wake of Disney’s purchase of Fox’s entertainment assets, Disney/Fox had to sell them to someone else to avoid violating antitrust laws. Potential bidders on the RSNs — which own broadcast rights to 42 MLB, NBA and NHL teams — included Liberty Media, Major League Baseball and, intriguingly, a group led by Ice Cube.
Ice Cube’s plan to use the networks to target non-sports programming in off-game hours at “a young and diverse audience” sounded promising and new, actually, but these are cable rights fees: Nothing promising and new is allowed to work in the world of cable rights fees. Instead, the winning bid came from none other than our old friends at Sinclair Broadcasting.
We all know Sinclair Broadcasting, of course, from the company’s aggressive pursuit of regional television networks all across the country, which have forced some seriously right-wing air copy on poor local telecasters, most recently with the scalding take that tear gas should be used on migrants at the border. We’ve all seen the infamous Timothy Burke Deadspin video at this point. They’re the worst.
And now, Sinclair is going to be the owner of a dramatically high percentage of the stations where you watch your sports. It’s easy to sit back and shake your head at Sinclair’s propaganda when it’s in northeast Iowa or suburban Kansas City and you don’t really see it. It is quite another situation when you can’t watch your local baseball team without supporting the broadcasting giant. As the Washington Post paraphrased Sinclair CEO Chris Ripley, “If St. Louis Cardinals fans want to watch the Cardinals, or Detroit Tigers fans want to watch the Tigers, they now have to go Sinclair.” That goes for 40 other teams as well now.
This has led, inevitably, to fears that the act of watching a baseball game or an NBA game is going to be fraught with political action, that your favorite local broadcaster is going to throw it to commercial with, “That’s a 1-2-3 inning for the Reds, we head to the top of the seventh, and remember: Lock Her Up.” And Ripley, when pushed by the Post’s Ben Strauss, didn’t necessarily deny that his company plans on their two-track business plan of local news and sports working hand in hand: “First of all, I take umbrage that there’s anything wrong with our news reporting,” he told Strauss when asked about Sinclair’s “reporting” reputation. “But setting that aside, is it a chance to rebrand the company? I think in many ways that is true. But you’re not going to see any of these networks branded as Sinclair Sports. We’re not a front-facing brand and never will be.” One way to look at that is that Ripley really would like to keep Sinclair’s news and its sports separate. But another is to admit that even though the Sinclair name won’t be out front … it’ll still undeniably be Sinclair.
It seems unlikely that we’ll be hearing QAnon theories in the middle of your Cleveland Cavaliers games, and Ripley and Sinclair appear to be taking great pains to make it clear that this is business transaction, not a political one. But, of course, everything is political, even sports — especially sports. To actively strive to keep politics out of sports is itself a political act, something the “Stick to Sports” crowd has never entirely accepted or even understood. It’s impossible to go to a sporting event, just as it’s impossible to go to any event, and not make some sort of political statement, from the purchasing of a ticket in a publicly financed stadium, to whether or not you stand for the national anthem, to what mode of transportation you’re taking home. To pretend that politics is independent of sports — particularly in a world where the Ricketts family owns the Cubs, or the President of the United States is close friends with the guy whose team is playing in the Super Bowl and watching the game with the owner of the spa that would unwittingly take the team’s owner down — is to be willfully blind, to implicitly endorse the existing power structure. Simply by watching at all, you’re supporting some bad guys. This does not necessarily make you a bad guy. But acting as if you are not in some small way a part of the problem is lying to yourself. Acting as if sports and politics are separate is a useful illusion, a convenient self-deceit that Sinclair will happily cash in on. And that’s if they even keep their word and don’t make their sports broadcasters parrot the company’s political lines the way they make their newscasters do.
But this still begs the question: Does sports even need a conservative voice? Isn’t it already one? After all, most of these networks have had the word “Fox” in their name for decades already. (And they’ve been promoting Fox Sports 1’s reactionary, conservative commentators for years too.) The culture of sports is already so conservative — at least in its power structures — that Sinclair probably won’t need to touch a thing. Last month, a Reds broadcaster explained away a widely panned contract extension signed by Braves infielder Ozzie Albies by saying, that, because Albies is from Curacao, “he may not know the difference between $35 million and $85 million.” (Albies is smart enough to speak four languages; the broadcaster later apologized.) That’s the sort of political analysis that, frankly, wouldn’t sound out of place on a Sinclair newscast, and it’s already part of the Fox Sports Ohio package. Sinclair gets that without even having to ask.
In the opening minutes of this year’s NFL Draft, commissioner Roger Goodell and the NFL brass escorted the top prospects — the young men about to have their childhood dreams come true — to the stage, where they stood there, proud, nervous, the next generation of football stars, the faces of the NFL for the next decade. Guess what happened next? The NFL Draft — which, I remind you, is not in fact a sporting event but actually just four days of reading names off an Excel spreadsheet — commenced with the singing of the national anthem. The future of the NFL, these players experiencing their final minutes outside the looming shadow of The Shield, stood there on a platform with the world watching. You better be damn sure they put their hands over their hearts and stood at attention. Does that sound like something you’d see on Sinclair? Or Fox Sports? It was of course on ESPN, a network that seemed to briefly flirt with political stances from its commentators before hastily shying away once the President and his followers started firing tweets its way.
New ESPN president Jimmy Pitaro said, within months of taking the job, that “I will tell you ESPN being a political organization is false. I will tell you I have been very, very clear with employees here that it is not our jobs to cover politics, purely.” Of course, the national anthem was a political story. The company’s new deal with the XFL and Vince McMahon — the biggest donor to the Trump Foundation, someone who said players who don’t stand for the anthem will be banned from the league and, of course, the husband of Trump’s former Small Business Administration head and current Trump 2020 PAC chair — is a political story. Literally every story ESPN covers, every game it airs, is a political story. Its refusal to admit this, and that it has adjusted its coverage accordingly, is a direct response to Trump, and the “Stick To Sports” mentality. The power structure of sports bends conservative, inexorably, eternally.
So you really think Sinclair is going to stick out in this particular world? Sinclair is as logical a player on this field as there could be … certainly more logical than poor Ice Cube. Sinclair is already such a part of professional sports’ mentality that having them own large swaths of the sports television landscape is something few will even notice. Ripley’s right: They don’t need to be front-facing. They’re already there.
Will Leitch’s Games column runs weekly. Email him at [email protected].
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This chilling video shows how local TV stations across America are parroting…
You might know Sinclair Broadcasting, the largest owner of local TV stations in the nation, from 2004, when it required its affiliates to air an anti-John Kerry propaganda film as a news segment and then fired one of its employees who spoke against it. Or from last year, when Last Week Tonight‘s John Oliver bludgeoned it in an 18-minute segment. Or from earlier this month, when CNN’s Brian Stelter discovered that it would be forcing its anchors to record “media bashing” promos that parallel President Donald Trump’s incendiary complaints about the “fake news” media—”a promotional campaign,” as Stelter puts it, “that sounds like pro-Trump propaganda.”
As Mother Jones‘ Andy Kroll has reported, Sinclair Broadcasting is well on its way to reaching three-quarters of all American homes. “The most important force shaping public opinion continues to be local, over-the-air television,” Andrew Jay Schwartzman, a senior attorney at Georgetown’s Communications and Technology Law Clinic, told Kroll last year.
Now, the media-bashing promos are in, and Deadspin put together a terrifying 98-second video that shows how far Sinclair Broadcasting is willing to go to bring right-wing propaganda into your living room. Take a look:
https://www.motherjones.com/politics/2018/03/this-amazing-video-shows-how-local-tv-stations-across-america-are-parroting-pro-trump-propaganda/
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