*This may be the key to all the hell the rest of us are living through.*

CRITICISM <https://www.cjr.org/criticism>
Journalism’s Gates keepers

https://www.cjr.org/criticism/gates-foundation-journalism-funding.php
By Tim Schwab <https://www.cjr.org/author/tim-schwab>AUGUST 21, 2020
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THIS STORY
Bill Gates, chairman of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, in 2019.
Samuel Habtab/AP Photo

LAST AUGUST, NPR
<https://www.npr.org/2019/08/05/747610085/in-seattle-a-move-across-town-could-be-a-path-out-of-poverty>
PROFILED
A HARVARD-LED EXPERIMENT to help low-income families find housing in
wealthier neighborhoods, giving their children access to better schools and
an opportunity to “break the cycle of poverty.” According to researchers
cited in the article, these children could see $183,000 greater earnings
over their lifetimes—a striking forecast for a housing program still in its
experimental stage.

If you squint as you read the story, you’ll notice that every quoted expert
is connected to the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, which helps fund the
project. And if you’re really paying attention, you’ll also see the
editor’s note at the end of the story, which reveals that NPR itself
receives funding from Gates.

NPR’s funding from Gates “was not a factor in why or how we did the story,”
reporter Pam Fessler says, adding that her reporting went beyond the voices
quoted in her article. The story, nevertheless, is one of hundreds NPR has
reported about the Gates Foundation or the work it funds, including myriad
favorable pieces written from the perspective of Gates or its grantees.

And that speaks to a larger trend—and ethical issue—with billionaire
philanthropists’ bankrolling the news. The Broad Foundation, whose
philanthropic agenda includes promoting charter schools, at one point
funded part of the *LA Times’ *
<https://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/style/2015/10/29/fd03d240-79cc-11e5-b9c1-f03c48c96ac2_story.html>reporting
on education. Charles Koch has made charitable donations to journalistic
institutions such as the Poynter Institute
<https://www.cjr.org/analysis/koch-foundation-asne-grant.php>, as well as
to news outlets such as the *Daily Caller
<https://www.cjr.org/watchdog/charles-koch-institute-fellowship-journalism.php>*,
that support his conservative politics. And the Rockefeller Foundation
funds *Vox*’s Future Perfect
<https://www.vox.com/future-perfect/2020/2/11/21133298/bill-gates-melinda-gates-money-foundation>,
a reporting project that examines the world “through the lens of effective
altruism”
<https://www.voxmedia.com/about-vox-media/2018/10/15/17969758/vox-future-perfect>—often
looking at philanthropy.

As philanthropists increasingly fill in the funding gaps at news
organizations—a role that is almost certain to expand in the media downturn
following the coronavirus pandemic—an underexamined worry is how this will
affect the ways newsrooms report on their benefactors. Nowhere does this
concern loom larger than with the Gates Foundation, a leading donor to
newsrooms and a frequent subject of favorable news coverage.

I recently examined nearly twenty thousand charitable grants the Gates
Foundation had made through the end of June and found more than $250
million going toward journalism. *Recipients included news operations like
the BBC, NBC, Al Jazeera, ProPublica, **National Journal, The Guardian,
Univision, Medium, the Financial Times, The Atlantic, the Texas Tribune,
Gannett, Washington Monthly, Le Monde, and the Center for Investigative
Reporting; charitable organizations affiliated with news outlets, like BBC
Media Action and the New York Times’ Neediest Cases Fund; media companies
such as Participant, whose documentary Waiting for “Superman” supports
Gates’s agenda on charter schools; journalistic organizations such as the
Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting, the National Press Foundation, and the
International Center for Journalists; and a variety of other groups
creating news content or working on journalism, such as the Leo Burnett
Company, an ad agency that Gates commissioned to create a “news site” to
promote the success of aid groups. In some cases, recipients say they
distributed part of the funding as subgrants to other journalistic
organizations—which makes it difficult to see the full picture of Gates’s
funding into the fourth estate. *

*Click on the link for the rest.*

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