Manufacturing Consent in Venezuela:Media Misreporting of a Country, 1998–2014
Release time: 2020-05-16
Alan MacLeod
Abstract
This article assesses Western news media coverage of Venezuela between 1998 and 2014. It found that the major newspapers in the UK and US reproduce the ideology of Western governments, ignoring strong empirical evidence challenging those positions. The press portrayed Venezuela in an overwhelmingly negative light, presenting highly contested minority opinions as facts while barely mentioning competing arguments, as Herman and Chomsky’s (2002) propaganda model would predict. After conducting interviews, it is clear that a small cadre of pre-selected journalists is immersed into a highly antagonistic newsroom culture that sees itself as the “resistance” to the Venezuelan government and its purpose to defeat it. As a result, hegemony of thought reigns and some journalists report self-censorship.
Keywords
Chomsky, Hugo Chavez, manufacturing consent, media, media studies, Venezuela
From: Critical Sociology 2020 46 (2)
Editor: Wang Yi