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Hendu Hammer's avatar

Do you get the sense that there is any chance a “non-partisan” or “non-biased” or “politically centered” media outlet could thrive in today’s media ecosystem? I’m thinking no.

Loved this article by the way.

I’ll throw out an observation. There are two main media biases for which media outlets operate – a principle/values based bias or a political bias. The more straight up ideological media outlets (thinking Reason for libertarians or The Nation for progressives) have a principle/values bias where their values are applied consistently, which means that they will grill politicians from both parties that stray from the publication's values.

Then there is the NY Times and the Fox New of the world, that don’t seem to apply consistent values, they apply consistent political bias instead. Bending values to favor one party or harm the other party.

Again, a lot of this is pressure from the demand side. And when a news organization (really, any organization for that matter) gets big enough where the profits matter and investors become involved, then the organizations become a victim of their own success and must concentrate more on satisfying customer demand rather than integrity of process.

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Rajiv Sethi's avatar

This is a fantastic post and I need to think about it for a while. But one immediate reaction is that this situation cannot be an equilibrium; if people quite generally are buying rationalizations there has to be a market for exposing bias, for which demand will come from people betting on the future (in prediction markets specifically or financial assets, including insurance contracts, more broadly). The suppliers in this market have to think like scientists, not lawyers, and build a reputation for this.

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