You may not like him let alone agree with him - but ignore him you can't. For John Pilger - veteran journalist, author and documentary filmmaker - is more than a gadfly, or a man on a mission or a person to be ignored. He says it as it is, even if it makes people uncomfortable.
Writing in New Matilda, he details the importance of Media Lens:
"What has changed in the way we see the world?
For as long as I can remember, the relationship of journalists with power has been hidden behind a bogus objectivity and notions of an ‘apathetic public’ that justify a mantra of ‘giving the public what they want.’
What has changed is the public’s perception and knowledge. No longer trusting what they read and see and hear, people in Western democracies are questioning as never before, particularly via the internet. Why, they ask, is the great majority of news sourced to authority and its vested interests? Why are many journalists the agents of power, not people?
Much of this bracing new thinking can be traced to a remarkable UK website, www.medialens.org. The creators of Media Lens, David Edwards and David Cromwell, assisted by their webmaster, Olly Maw, have had such an extraordinary influence since they set up the site in 2001 that, without their meticulous and humane analysis, the full gravity of the debacles of Iraq and Afghanistan might have been consigned to bad journalism’s first draft of bad history.
Peter Wilby put it well in his review of Guardians of Power: The Myth of the Liberal Media, a drawing-together of Media Lens essays published by Pluto Press, which he described as ‘mercifully free of academic or political jargon and awesomely well researched. All journalists should read it, because the Davids make a case that demands to be answered.’"
Writing in New Matilda, he details the importance of Media Lens:
"What has changed in the way we see the world?
For as long as I can remember, the relationship of journalists with power has been hidden behind a bogus objectivity and notions of an ‘apathetic public’ that justify a mantra of ‘giving the public what they want.’
What has changed is the public’s perception and knowledge. No longer trusting what they read and see and hear, people in Western democracies are questioning as never before, particularly via the internet. Why, they ask, is the great majority of news sourced to authority and its vested interests? Why are many journalists the agents of power, not people?
Much of this bracing new thinking can be traced to a remarkable UK website, www.medialens.org. The creators of Media Lens, David Edwards and David Cromwell, assisted by their webmaster, Olly Maw, have had such an extraordinary influence since they set up the site in 2001 that, without their meticulous and humane analysis, the full gravity of the debacles of Iraq and Afghanistan might have been consigned to bad journalism’s first draft of bad history.
Peter Wilby put it well in his review of Guardians of Power: The Myth of the Liberal Media, a drawing-together of Media Lens essays published by Pluto Press, which he described as ‘mercifully free of academic or political jargon and awesomely well researched. All journalists should read it, because the Davids make a case that demands to be answered.’"
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