Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight
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Social marketing, PR insight & thought leadership - from The PR Coach
Curated by Jeff Domansky
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Analysis | Fighting falsehoods around the world: A dispatch on the growing global fact-checking movement

Analysis | Fighting falsehoods around the world: A dispatch on the growing global fact-checking movement | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

MADRID — “Nos encanta la verdad.” We love the truth.


Political fact-checking has existed in the United States for many years. FactCheck.org was established in 2003, and The Washington Post Fact Checker and PolitiFact were launched in 2007.


In recent years, this movement representing a new form of accountability journalism has exploded around the globe. Now, there are 126 fact-checking organizations in 49 countries. Clearly, voters in many countries care about and want to know the truth.


About 190 fact-checkers from 54 countries attended the fourth annual Global Fact-Checking Summit, July 5-7, 2017. The International Fact-Checking Network at Poynter Institute hosted the summit. The first meeting of fact-checkers from around the world took place in 2014, with 50 fact-checkers. Now the community has grown so much that we needed a “speed meeting” session for introductions....

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Political fact checking is exploding around the world.

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Andrew Sullivan Says His Blog Made $611,000 in Less Than 2 Months | Mashable

Andrew Sullivan Says His Blog Made $611,000 in Less Than 2 Months | Mashable | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

In the beginning of this year, Andrew Sullivan made the bold decision to part ways with The Daily Beast and turn his popular political blog The Daily Dish into a stand-alone business. As part of that move, Sullivan announced that the blog would forego ads and generate revenue through a metered paywall and an annual subscription fee for those who wished to pay.

 

Some questioned whether Sullivan would be able to make enough money from this model to support the business, which includes a team of writers and editors. On Monday, however, Sullivan revealed that he is already more than two-thirds of the way towards his goal for the year — after less than two months.

 

The Dish has brought in approximately $611,000 to date, the vast majority of which came before the paywall went up on Feb. 1 as many generous readers paid more than the $19.99 annual subscription fee to help Sullivan get the website on firm footing. In the three weeks that the paywall has been up, Sullivan says The Dish has brought in $93,000 in subscriptions thanks to the metered model. Sullivan's goal for the entire year was $900,000 in order to avoid pay cuts or other significant changes to the operation.

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Will this paywall-funded blog be sustainable once the novelty wears off? Stay tuned.

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A hellscape of lies and distorted reality awaits journalists covering President Trump | Washington Post

A hellscape of lies and distorted reality awaits journalists covering President Trump | Washington Post | Public Relations & Social Marketing Insight | Scoop.it

What can this small chapter tell us about what’s to come?


That Trump will be what columnist Frida Ghitis of the Miami Herald calls “the gaslighter in chief” — that he will pull out all the stops to make people think that they should believe him, not their own eyes. (“Gaslighting” is a reference to the 1940s movie in which a manipulative husband psychologically abuses his wife by denying the reality that the gaslights in their home are growing dimmer and dimmer.)


“The techniques,” Ghitis wrote, “include saying and doing things and then denying it, blaming others for misunderstanding, disparaging their concerns as oversensitivity, claiming outrageous statements were jokes or misunderstandings, and other forms of twilighting the truth.”...

Jeff Domansky's insight:

Margaret William writes that the past tells us plenty about what to expect from the ‘gaslighter in chief.’ You can add twilighting to the list of terms you need to know in the fake news future.

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