If someone were to tell you that major and influential business sectors like the fossil fuel and health insurance industries simply don’t exist, or imply that major corporations like ExxonMobil and Cigna don’t try to manipulate public opinion and advance a political agenda in order to protect and maximize their profits, you might find it hard to contain your laughter.
But looking at corporate media’s coverage of corporate media, one gets the sense that anyone who dares to suggest that media corporations like Comcast-owned MSNBC, AT&T-owned CNN or News Corp–owned Fox News have their own commercial interests—which incentivize them to push pro-corporate politics—are kooky “conspiracy theorists.”
That’s really strange. After all, there are plenty of reports from corporate media discussing how major oil and health insurance companies spend fortunes to propagandize Americans into believing that a single-payer healthcare system would be disastrous, or that the climate crisis really isn’t that serious, despite all evidence to the contrary (FAIR.org, 1/24/20, 1/31/20). There are whistleblowers like former Cigna PR executive Wendell Potter who revealed how he, along with other paid corporate propagandists, cultivated “contacts and relationships among journalists and other media gatekeepers,” and learned from the tobacco industry’s “groundbreaking work in stealth PR” in order to develop talking points and advance a political agenda to protect industry profits.
So why exactly should we trust for-profit media outlets to be impartial and have their news coverage untainted by their own business interests?
Throughout the 2020 election cycle, FAIR (7/17/19, 8/21/19, 1/30/20, 4/7/20) has documented how corporate media have been trying to play kingmaker by aggressively pushing centrist and right-wing Democratic presidential candidates like Joe Biden onto the electorate, while assailing progressives like Bernie Sanders as “unelectable.” Now that Sanders has dropped out of the race, it’s worth examining the role propagandistic and hostile media coverage played throughout the primary in determining the outcome.

Jeff Cohen (Common Dreams, 3/16/20): “The media barrage on electability has proved…persuasive to many Democrats—apparently convincing them that Biden can defeat Donald Trump while Sanders is a huge risk.”
Analyzing the paradoxical phenomenon of the sizable “Socialists for Biden” voting bloc, FAIR’s founder Jeff Cohen (Common Dreams, 3/16/20) noted that although continuous exit polls confirm that most voters agree with Sanders ideologically, many nevertheless voted for Biden, because they perceived him to be a more “electable” candidate against Donald Trump.
Although several people have debunked the myth of “low” youth voter turnout in this election cycle (FAIR.org, 2/26/20; Films for Action, 3/5/20; Atlantic, 3/17/20), it’s true that older voters turned out in massive numbers to support Biden. On Twitter (3/14/20), journalist Malaika Jabali attributed the “generational divide” in voting behavior to an “information divide,” and argued that many older voters don’t suffer from a lack of information, so much as too much information from different sources compared to younger voters.
That influential media outlets like CNN, MSNBC, NPR, the New York Times and Washington Post continue to exercise a formidable class-control function on behalf of their owners and advertisers seems to be borne out by data confirming Jabali’s analysis.
Pew Research (12/10/18) found that although social media has become a more popular source for news, television still retains supremacy, with 49% of US adults receiving news most often from TV. Whereas young adults aged 18 to 29 receive 36% of their news from social media and 16% from TV, older voters aged 50–64 receive 65% of their news from TV and only 14% from social media, and voters older than 65 receive a whopping 81% of their news from TV and a mere 8% from social media.

The age groups that got much of their news from television and print newspapers and little from social media were the best groups for Biden—and the worst groups for Sanders (Pew, 12/10/18).
Pew (9/26/19) also documented a striking partisan divide on Americans’ trust in the media, with 69% of Democrats having a “great” or “fair” amount of trust in the media, compared to only 15% of Republicans.
Other media studies of cable news like CNN and MSNBC confirmed their pivotal role as an anti-Sanders attack machine (FAIR.org, 1/30/20). According to the Norman Lear Center (5/19), self-identified liberals watch MSNBC at three times the rate of moderates and ten times the rate of conservative viewers. Branko Marcetic (In These Times, 11/13/19) documented that MSNBC’s August–September 2019 coverage of the Democratic primary not only emphasized electability over policy issues, but also talked about Biden three times as often as Sanders, who had fewer negative mentions (11%) compared to Sanders (21%). Another survey by In These Times (3/9/20) of CNN’s coverage of the 24 hours after Sanders and Biden’s massive wins in Nevada and South Carolina found that Sanders received three times more negative coverage than Biden, despite winning by similar margins.
Given Sanders’ massive advantages over Biden when it came to campaign staff and volunteers, organizational and online presence, ad buys as well as money in Super Tuesday states, it’s clear that the media blitz following Biden’s South Carolina win played a decisive role in propelling him to victory in states he didn’t even campaign in (New York Times, 2/26/20).
Yet, in what is truly a collective galaxy-brain level take, corporate media appeared to deny their own existence and how the profit motive compromised their coverage throughout the primary.

Washington Post media critic Erik Wemple (10/24/19) puts scare quotes around “corporate media”—like they’re a figment of Bernie Sanders’ imagination.
Whenever corporate media discuss themselves, they frequently use scare quotes around the term “corporate media” (e.g., Washington Post, 10/24/19; Politico, 8/13/19), as if the term is referring to a nonexistent entity or a figment of their audience’s imagination. This is in stark contrast to their alarmist attitude towards foreign state media outlets like RT and Xinhua, which are frequently referred to as “propaganda” and “state media”—no quotation marks required (New York Times, 3/8/17, 2/18/20).
Yet when they weren’t suggesting they were imaginary, corporate media were also fully capable on occasion of discussing their enormous impact on the race. Vanity Fair’s “Joe Biden, Revenant, Was an Irresistible Media Story—and It Helped Win Him Super Tuesday” (3/5/20) described how Biden campaign aides were gloating to CNN about riding their “earned-media tsunami” to victory in Super Tuesday—referring to coverage that wasn’t paid for following Biden’s South Carolina win—and estimated to be worth at least $72 million during those crucial days.
Despite noting that Sanders actually had more free coverage ($156 million) during this time period from the same “‘corporate media’” which had “written him off” earlier, Vanity Fair argued that media narratives trump any other factor (including money), with Sanders’ narrative being largely negative in contrast to Biden’s:
In recent days Biden has basked in mostly positive coverage, with TV pundits citing his South Carolina victory in arriving at a consensus narrative: Biden, despite poor showings in all of the early-primary states, is the comeback candidate peaking at the perfect moment…. Following Biden’s Saturday blowout, the media narrative shifted from Sanders being the momentum candidate to questions about whether his campaign was constrained by a ceiling due to his poor South Carolina performance, particularly with black voters, the most consistent Democratic voting bloc.
Corporate media frequently noted how Sanders has been their most frequent critic when he was on the campaign trail, and even when they grudgingly admitted its validity at times, they treated Sanders’ media criticism as an ideological perspective on the media, rather than an uncontroversial description. Politico (8/13/19) wrote that “Sanders has long accused the ‘corporate media’ of putting the interests of the elite above those of the majority of Americans.” Vanity Fair (2/18/20) wrote: “Sanders has long contended that the agenda of ‘corporate media’ doesn’t necessarily reflect the people’s needs, and his 2020 campaign has doubled as a rolling media criticism shop.” The New York Times (3/5/20) also gaslit readers by attributing critique of the “‘corporate media,’” and MSNBC’s hosts for pushing an “‘establishment’” perspective, merely to Sanders and the “activist left,” as if their critique were only a sectarian complaint.
The Washington Post’s media critic Erik Wemple (10/24/19) mocked Sanders’ critique of the “‘corporate media,’” implying that Sanders hasn’t “done enough research” to “tease out tendencies,” despite writing that “attacking the ‘corporate media’ is good politics for Sanders, and his critiques sometimes land with heft and reason.” Post media columnist Margaret Sullivan (2/12/20) glancingly acknowledged media hostility towards Sanders when she observed that Sanders kept dissing “what he calls the corporate media,” and that his “ardent followers bond with him and with one another by despising the mainstream media, often enough with good reason”—yet she failed to explain this hostility in structural terms regarding media ownership and commercial interests. In the Post’s “Bernie Sanders’s Bogus Media Beef,” Aaron Blake (8/14/19) cited executive editor Marty Baron dismissing Sanders’ claims as a “conspiracy theory,” while the Post’s Paul Waldman (8/14/19) dismissed Sanders’ media criticism as “something in common with pretty much every candidate,” and breathtakingly asserted that “ideological bias is usually the least important.”
Waldman’s assessment isn’t shared by FAIR (Extra!, 10/89), or by Politico’s founding editor John Harris (11/7/19), who admitted that “the pervasive force shaping coverage of Washington and elections is what might be thought of as centrist bias, flowing from reporters and sources alike.”

Sanders’ “ridiculous” claim, according to Chris Cillizza (CNN, 8/13/19), is that the owner of a media outlet has an impact on its viewpoint.
Another approach to dismissing structural media criticism has been to portray Sanders and Trump’s media criticisms as equally wacky conspiracy theories (FAIR.org, 1/24/20). CNN’s Chris Cillizza (8/13/19) asserted that Sanders’ critique of the Jeff Bezos–owned Washington Post’s coverage is “absolutely no different than what Trump does.” Politico’s John Harris (2/13/20) bemoaned the “dilution of mainstream media’s institutional power” and pined for the days where editors at “major news institutions possessed enormous power” to “summon sustained national attention on subjects they deemed important” with their story selection and framing, while denouncing Sanders for following the “Trump precedent” in “taking flight from public accountability.”
When corporate media didn’t dismiss their bias against him, they sunnily described how Sanders didn’t seem to need fairer coverage from corporate media—and cable news in particular—because nonprofit media outlets, with considerably less resources and reach, are increasingly picking up the slack. Citing the “formidable” influence of “alternative media,” the Los Angeles Times (12/12/19) argued that “coverage in what Sanders likes to disparage as the ‘corporate media’ may matter less to him than to any of his rivals because of the benefit he derives from a surging alternative media ecosystem.” The New Republic (2/12/20, 2/28/20) acknowledged MSNBC’s hostile posture towards Sanders, yet also failed to explain that bias in terms of corporate interests, while arguing that Sanders’ campaign strategy of relying on an alternative media infrastructure to run “against the ‘corporate media’” and “withstand attacks from mainstream networks” has “worked wonders.”
Strikingly, in all these reports, corporate media either misrepresented Sanders’ proposed solutions to corporate media bias or omitted them altogether. Vermont journalist Paul Heintz (Washington Post, 2/26/19), for example, chided Sanders for not understanding what a “free press” does, and claimed that Sanders’ remedy for corporate media is merely “uncritical, stenographic coverage of his agenda.”

Bernie Sanders (CJR, 8/26/19): “One reason we do not have enough real journalism in America right now is because many outlets are being gutted by the same forces of greed that are pillaging our economy.”
In fact, Sanders’ op-ed in the Columbia Journalism Review (8/26/19) echoed many of FAIR’s criticisms of corporate media and proposed solutions:
Today, after decades of consolidation and deregulation, just a small handful of companies control almost everything you watch, read and download. Given that reality, we should not want even more of the free press to be put under the control of a handful of corporations and “benevolent” billionaires who can use their media empires to punish their critics and shield themselves from scrutiny….
In my administration, we are going to institute an immediate moratorium on approving mergers of major media corporations until we can better understand the true effect these transactions have on our democracy…. We must also explore new ways to empower media organizations to collectively bargain with these tech monopolies, and we should consider taxing targeted ads and using the revenue to fund nonprofit civic-minded media.
Setting aside the interlocking commercial interests mass media corporations share with other industries and advertisers funding their coverage (FAIR.org, 8/1/17), just as one can expect the healthcare and fossil fuel industries to launch propaganda campaigns to protect their profits (Intercept, 11/20/18; Guardian, 10/23/19), one can reliably predict these same media corporations to oppose any political agenda that harms their own profitability. Given Sanders’ opposition to future mergers and corporate consolidation of mass media giants, proposals to wield antitrust legislation against Google and Facebook, and levying new taxes to fund nonprofit media outlets, is it any surprise that for-profit news sources opposed his candidacy (Politico, 8/28/19)?
Perhaps future media criticism might sound less “conspiratorial” if we simply referred to outlets like MSNBC as “Comcast,” CNN as “AT&T” and the Washington Post as “Jeff Bezos” instead. When one understands corporate media as an industry in themselves, decisions to have a centrist bias to maximize profits by appealing to liberals and conservatives alike, or creating “information silos” to sell the news as a commodity to target demographics, make a lot more sense. And when we understand the news industry as a top-down institution, beholden to stockholders like all other corporations, we can stop blaming journalists for bad coverage, and start blaming executives like Les Moonves and Tony Maddox for doing things like gifting billions of dollars in free coverage for Trump (FAIR.org, 3/31/20, 4/13/20).
Then maybe claiming that corporate media outlets like MSNBC and CNN are hostile to left-wing political agendas will be considered just as obvious as saying that ExxonMobil and Cigna are opposed to climate action and universal healthcare.
Featured image: New York Times (2/26/20) depiction of Joe Biden addressing reporters (photo: Brittainy Newman).




Et Tu, FAIR…
As of 4/24/20 Biden is 709 delegates short of nomination. There’s still time to avoid a huge mistake and nominate Sanders instead if the DNC allows the primary process to restart…
Pay no attention to that man(ipulation) behind the curtain
Absolutely true, something I’ve been railing against for quite some time. The anti-Sanders pro-Biden bias evident of MSNBC’s Morning Joe was something to see. NEVER did Joe or any talking head discuss Sander’s issues seriously. He’s a Socialist, after all. Why the bias? Most primary talk show hosts are millionaires several times over and they certainly don’t want to pay a penny more in taxes. The same with their overlords. Probably a similar bias existed on CNN but I don’t watch it so I can’t say.
Greetings Mr. Cho,
I really enjoyed your deconstruction of the current electoral process and the corporate media’s continued ability to manufacture consent among the u.s. electorate for all the wrong reasons. Of course the outcome of a misinformed citizenry to make decisions in their own interest almost always leave them holding the shitty end of the stick. Please continue to share your well constructed analysis with us, they are sorely needed and appreciated. Peace.
Excellent EMPHASIS on something the MSM likes to downplay or ignore out-of-existence — the FACT that journalists in for profit-corporations (say that again slowly…FOR…PROFIT…CORPORATIONS… ) can’t piss-off the ‘big-boss’ in the ‘corner office’ with strong, repeated progressive/leftist critiques of capitalism (especially involving their owner) or they could easily find themselves out-of-work (if the company/facility is non-union) or transferred to ‘human interest’ or obituary columns if they’re union members. This is NOT a “conspiracy theory”, it’s simply lesson #1 in the tacit ‘corporate survival guide’ in ANY corporation (or any organization, for that matter) — IF you repeatedly rail against the basic precepts of the organization from a publicly-prominent position, you’ll be asked to leave (unless you’re somehow irreplaceable). Hell, subordinates in companies know better than to openly criticize the HOBBIES of the ‘big-boys’, much less their OBSESSIONS (ie; like wanting to be one of the richest tycoons in the world). I say this from some 50 yrs (and counting) experience in the corporate environment, as well as numerous articles & books that substantiate it.
One can argue whether this corporate behavior is good or bad, but no-one can seriously argue that it’s not the norm – there’s just way too much evidence to support it
Bernie is on my ballot next month and I am writing in Bernie in November. When Biden totally loses his brain before the election—what will you do DNC?
Excellent analysis, Joshua. A glance at the interlocking directorships of the corporate media shows that news is at most incidental among the commodities they peddle. Their main product is Zionist war propaganda, and employees who dare to practice journalism go the way of workers in any business who don’t strictly follow the owner’s’ orders.
“Zionist war propaganda?” Don’t inject your antisemitism into Cho’s critique of corporate media, ‘kay? Yeesh.
Don’t inject you confusion of anti-Zionism with anti-semiticism. ‘kay?
I just don’t get why it is so urgent to insert anti-Zionism at ALL in the current context. It has nothing to do with the article! Why is “zionism” — the only form of nationalism associated with Jews – always the punching bag, if not for anti-semitism. So much nationalism, racism, ethnocentrism in many/most parts of the world, including (especially!) USA. Check your bias, man
As a fierce critic of the state of Israel who happens to be Jewish, I call bullshit on that, Bradley. You’re either too ignorant to see it, or you’re being disingenuous.
US media is quite literally reactionary, as often evinced in literature, history and… oh, that’s right, US Media won’t admit to ubiqutous censorship (like David Brock’s destruction of lefty blogosphere, assuring Hillary, ergo Trump!) They control the who & what we get to hear, so the when, where and how can be mopped up by the cops and company thugs? When the planet’s richest man has Ukranian nazis tell us the last few purveyors of actual journalism are Rooski propaganda: Intercept, Naked Capitalism, Shadowproof, Counterpunch, Moon of Alabama, Commondreams, Truthout, Jacobin, DeSmogBlog, Matt, Naomi, Yasha, Mark, Katie, Glen and you guys all but disappeared from folks’ Google, Facebook, Twitter… basically, We’ve been rendered deaf, dumb and blind, that our Tag-team Kleptocracy has made up our minds, that we can’t handle the truth!
Thank you for well elucidated research work, sir.
Joshua,
This piece would be even stronger if you undertook an analysis of the way destroyed Warren in similar fashion.
One of the most annoying things to me about Warren dropping out, is that her supporters turned it into a moment to focus on sexism/misogyny, except that the treatment of Warren in MSM mirrored Sanders almost identically. Where Bernie was “loud, angry”, Warren was “shrill, mad”.
Also, as soon as both candidates dropped out, they were instantly turned into media darlings, with all sorts of kindness directed at them for essentially getting out of Biden’s way.
Consider if Warren would have gotten all the kind press treatment if she had endorsed Sanders after withdrawing……extremely unlikely.
Once again, I plead that the Bernie Sanders voters back Joe Biden in the election so that the country not face four more years of Donald Trump.I believe Biden will pick a VP that wil give considerations to Sanders’ views. look what Trump has done iwith the corona virus saga. The mistakes made in the 2016 election not to support Clinton enough, led to the election of Trump.Yes, you are angry and unsatisfied. do not jump from the frying pan into the fire! There are many republicans that do not like Trump, won’t you join with them and moderate Democrats, like myself to defeat this cancer, called Trump!