The news media’s relationship with power has always been complicated. That includes both political power and the power of money. As noted at the link, the Los Angeles Times was owned by Republican stalwarts for years; they simply didn’t report news that reflected well on Democrats. More recently we have billionaire Toddler-cultist David Ellison buying as much media as he can get his hands on. And in the case of CBS, having Bari Weiss reboot 60 Minutes so that it’s a right-wing propaganda organ (more on that here). She may get to do the same to CNN. And her former operation, the Free Press, was always about bullshit.
Or consider the New York Times headline from 2024 — 200,000 people hired but we’re concerned — vs a recent headline reporting growth of 57,000 jobs — whoa, economy is shiny! Paul Campos at Lawyers Guns and Money has repeatedly argued that the media’s sanewashing of the Toddler and his cabinet (e.g., here and here) is because he plunges them into an existential crisis — a skeptical/cynical “both sides are wrong and the truth lies in the middle” no longer works well when the president is utterly deranged. While the “both sides” approach really doesn’t work any more, I doubt that’s it. They know what they’re doing and they do it with calculation. Whether it’s pre-emptive compliance, fear of Toddler administration threats, a dream of winning conservative readers, a desire to show how unbiased they are or this is what their editors and publishers want, it’s a choice, though a bad one. Or maybe they’re still running on internal beliefs about the Democrats as the Mommy Party and the importance of listening to white anger. Or nervous about being subpoenaed if they hurt the Toddler’s fee-fees.
It’s not all politics, though. Jeff Bezos made it clear during 2024 that he wanted the Washington Post to swing more conservative. The idea there’s a vast, undeserved conservative audience was dubious from the start — if the WaPo wanted to crack that market it would take a lot of work. Instead we have dreadful attempts to pivot to video and mass firings of the paper’s sports reporters. That’s daft; sports coverage is meat and drink for any paper.
That astonishes me. I get that for Bezos, losing the paper would be small change and I doubt he feels the same kind of gut punch as losing money on AI. Still, he does like making money and its not hard. The Wall Street Journal proves a paper can be conservative and still deliver good reporting (it’s editorial page, by contrast, is virulently right wing). Nevertheless, he’s gutting it. There was a time a couple of decades earlier when billionaires investing in papers seemed like the best way to help journalism survive in the Internet age. Bezos bought the paper in 2013 and it kept doing good work; now we see what happens when a billionaire has a change of heart.
Or consider Disney yanking the 538 archives offline. Is any of the information going to be available anywhere or will it disappear?
I’d say small 501c(3) papers like The Local Reporter are the way to go but let’s face it, we rely on donations and those are often in short supply. Neighborhood newsletters help. As I’ve said before, this is something donors could spend money on more productively rather than looking for the liberal Joe Rogan.
This thread points out the Mellon Foundation is the only foundation providing major arts funding, albeit some people see that as sinister rather than a sad sign of lack of interest by other potential donors.
If it’s any comfort, Ben Shapiro’s Daily Wire is floundering too.














