Slanting the Story: The Forces That Shape the News
By (Author) Trudy Lieberman
The New Press
The New Press
8th August 2000
United States
General
Non Fiction
Reportage, journalism or collected columns
Media, entertainment, information and communication industries
070.44932052
Hardback
208
Width 144mm, Height 215mm
368g
Slanting the Story is a powerful and provocative expos of the real "right-wing conspiracy": the well-orchestrated efforts of conservative foundations and think tanks in recent years to use the media to dominate debates in American policy.
Award-winning investigative reporter Trudy Lieberman shows clearly and convincingly how right-wing think tanks have moved their ideas to the front of the national agenda and engineered sweeping changes in public policy. She also reveals how a gullible mainstream media has consistently taken them at their word and spread their ideas.
In many ways, Lieberman argues, organizations like the Heritage Foundation, the Cato Institute, the Manhattan Institute, and others have "beaten Ralph Nader at his own game," closely modeling their efforts on the successes of the consumer, environmental, and publicinterest movements of the 1960s and 1970s. Through four welldocumented case studies of right-wing policy strategies of recent yearsto dampen public support for the AARP and the Social Security program, to gut the Food and Drug Administration's regulatory powers, to eliminate the Head Start program, and to fundamentally change the structure of MedicareLieberman shows how conservative foundations and think tanks have skillfully used the media to demonize the federal government and to diminish public support for the social welfare system.
Credible and full of evidence, Slanting the Story reveals the shadowy world of wealthy right-wing think tanks for the first time.
This book represents the opinions of Trudy Lieberman and not those of the Consumers Union.
A journalist for more than thirty years, Trudy Lieberman is the director of the Center for Consumer Health Choices at Consumers Union and a contributing editor to the Columbia Journalism Review. She has won two National Magazine Awards and ten National Press Club Awards for her work. She lives in New York.