Corporation claims it needs to review programme content and removes it from its iPlayer service The iPlayer programme page this morning. The BBC has removed its documentary ‘Gaza: How to Surv…
Excellent comment. I try to keep up with who owns what too, but it’s kinda like keeping track of food brands. There only so many owners, but the huge amount of brands (news sources) can make it difficult.
It’s also a very real problem, especially in rural areas of Canada, and small communities. Small papers are being bought up en masse, and replaced by generic tat “news” with little if any relevance to the communities, and instruction about what is acceptable for print filtering down ultimately from Chatham Assets, which is owned by Anthony Melchiorre, and is closely associated with the GOP. Ergo a Republican vehicle for disseminating approved information. This situation, where local governments of small communities and rural areas that in the past would have a local paper, now are using Meta products and Twitter to communicate with residents and kinda don’t have much in the way of options to change that.
It’s not a great situation. And I think we’ll see that like with food and alcohol, a very small group of almost entirely American companies owns basically everything if you follow the shells to the top.
Excellent comment. I try to keep up with who owns what too, but it’s kinda like keeping track of food brands. There only so many owners, but the huge amount of brands (news sources) can make it difficult.
It’s also a very real problem, especially in rural areas of Canada, and small communities. Small papers are being bought up en masse, and replaced by generic tat “news” with little if any relevance to the communities, and instruction about what is acceptable for print filtering down ultimately from Chatham Assets, which is owned by Anthony Melchiorre, and is closely associated with the GOP. Ergo a Republican vehicle for disseminating approved information. This situation, where local governments of small communities and rural areas that in the past would have a local paper, now are using Meta products and Twitter to communicate with residents and kinda don’t have much in the way of options to change that.
It’s not a great situation. And I think we’ll see that like with food and alcohol, a very small group of almost entirely American companies owns basically everything if you follow the shells to the top.
They dont expect my pedons to check beyond the first layer
And it fucking works