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On the Media
On the Media (OTM) is a public radio show and podcast from WNYC Studios that primarily covers the media. Since relaunching in 2001 with Brooke Gladstone as host, the show has received at least 10 awards, including two Peabody Awards.
OTM explores how the news and other media influence the public's world view. Many stories center on events of the previous week and critique how they were covered in the news. These segments often consist of interviews with reporters about the challenges they face in covering controversial issues, as well as media scholars and analysts.[citation needed]
OTM has covered topics such as the use of video news releases, net neutrality, digital broadcast flags, media consolidation, censorship, freedom of the press, disinformation, the influence of 24-hour cable news television coverage, media bias, and how technology is changing the media.[citation needed]
The show addresses questions about how the media are influenced or spun by politicians, corporations and interest groups with the intent to shape public opinion. This includes an OTM feature that covers the media's use of terminology that may engender biased points of view, such as the use of hot-button issues and code words such as "Michael Moore," "torture," "evangelical" and "islamofascist".
In the wake of the election of Donald Trump to the U.S. presidency, OTM shifted its editorial focus somewhat to give more time to reporting under-covered stories. Since then, OTM has produced a 2016 series on poverty, a 2019 series on eviction, a 2022–25 series on right-wing talk radio, shortwave broadcasting in the United States and Stuart Epperson, as well as a 2018 investigative series, in partnership with The Guardian, on what the media get wrong in coverage of white supremacists.
OTM's ongoing "Breaking News Consumer's Handbook" series advises the public on how to tell good reporting from bad during the early hours and days of coverage of "a big, tragic story", such as coverage of hurricanes.
On the Media first aired February 7, 1993, on WNYC as a local call-in show, initially hosted by Brian Lehrer, then Warren Levinson, and later by Alex S. Jones. During its early episodes it was called Inside Media, but the title was changed to avoid confusion with a same-named trade publication. In 1997, the show went national in a magazine-style format, hosted by Brian Lehrer. During this period, On the Media was under-resourced, Lehrer had commitments stemming from his own daily show, and On the Media did not have an editor.
In late 2000, Gladstone was brought in by WNYC's director of programming to rethink and relaunch the show. The newly formatted OTM debuted in January 2001, co-hosted by Gladstone and Bob Garfield. In May 2021, WNYC dismissed Garfield over alleged repeated violations of WNYC's anti-bullying policy. Gladstone continued as the show's sole host. In July 2024, longtime OTM producer Micah Loewinger was named Gladstone's co-host.
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On the Media AI simulator
(@On the Media_simulator)
On the Media
On the Media (OTM) is a public radio show and podcast from WNYC Studios that primarily covers the media. Since relaunching in 2001 with Brooke Gladstone as host, the show has received at least 10 awards, including two Peabody Awards.
OTM explores how the news and other media influence the public's world view. Many stories center on events of the previous week and critique how they were covered in the news. These segments often consist of interviews with reporters about the challenges they face in covering controversial issues, as well as media scholars and analysts.[citation needed]
OTM has covered topics such as the use of video news releases, net neutrality, digital broadcast flags, media consolidation, censorship, freedom of the press, disinformation, the influence of 24-hour cable news television coverage, media bias, and how technology is changing the media.[citation needed]
The show addresses questions about how the media are influenced or spun by politicians, corporations and interest groups with the intent to shape public opinion. This includes an OTM feature that covers the media's use of terminology that may engender biased points of view, such as the use of hot-button issues and code words such as "Michael Moore," "torture," "evangelical" and "islamofascist".
In the wake of the election of Donald Trump to the U.S. presidency, OTM shifted its editorial focus somewhat to give more time to reporting under-covered stories. Since then, OTM has produced a 2016 series on poverty, a 2019 series on eviction, a 2022–25 series on right-wing talk radio, shortwave broadcasting in the United States and Stuart Epperson, as well as a 2018 investigative series, in partnership with The Guardian, on what the media get wrong in coverage of white supremacists.
OTM's ongoing "Breaking News Consumer's Handbook" series advises the public on how to tell good reporting from bad during the early hours and days of coverage of "a big, tragic story", such as coverage of hurricanes.
On the Media first aired February 7, 1993, on WNYC as a local call-in show, initially hosted by Brian Lehrer, then Warren Levinson, and later by Alex S. Jones. During its early episodes it was called Inside Media, but the title was changed to avoid confusion with a same-named trade publication. In 1997, the show went national in a magazine-style format, hosted by Brian Lehrer. During this period, On the Media was under-resourced, Lehrer had commitments stemming from his own daily show, and On the Media did not have an editor.
In late 2000, Gladstone was brought in by WNYC's director of programming to rethink and relaunch the show. The newly formatted OTM debuted in January 2001, co-hosted by Gladstone and Bob Garfield. In May 2021, WNYC dismissed Garfield over alleged repeated violations of WNYC's anti-bullying policy. Gladstone continued as the show's sole host. In July 2024, longtime OTM producer Micah Loewinger was named Gladstone's co-host.
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