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Moving beyond news deserts and misinformation
Episode 204

Moving beyond news deserts and misinformation

This week, we explore how America's market-driven media have undermined democracy — and how more robust public media in the U.S. might help right the ship.

Democracy Works · Victor Pickard, Chris Beem, Jenna Spinelle, Candis Watts Smith

February 14, 202242m 57s

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Show Notes

We've talked a lot on this show about the problems that news deserts, misinformation, and information silos present to democracy. Our guest this week says these things are all downstream from a much more fundamental disconnect between the need for a free press in a democracy and the models the United States has set up to make it happen.

Victor Pickard is the C. Edwin Baker Professor of Media Policy and Political Economy at the University of Pennsylvania and author of Democracy Without Journalism? Confronting the Misinformation Society. We discuss the history of market failures and policy choices that led to the decline of local journalism and the spread of misinformation. 

Victor walks us through his vision for what a re-imagined public media ecosystem in the United States might look like and what it will take to get there. Examples like WBEZ's recent acquisition of the Chicago Sun-Times provide examples of what's possible. Candis and Chris discuss how Victor's arguments about the assault on public media are similar to what we heard from Derek W. Black about public education last year.

Additional Information

Democracy Without Journalism? Confronting the Misinformation Society

WBEZ acquires the Chicago Sun-Times

Related Episodes

News deserts are democracy deserts too

Public schools, not government schools

How democracies can win the war on reality


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Topics

misinformationlocal newsjournalism and democracypublic media