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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TEX6ONLvJg0
From the oral history collections of the University of Georgia. Recorded in 1983. The Richard Nixon Foundation applies the legacy and vision of President Ric
https://pjmedia.com/benbartee/2024/02/01/forgotten-history-richard-nixon-warns-of-media-elitist-complex-n4926034
File. In a resurfaced 1983 interview, Richard Nixon reflects powerfully on the power that the media truly wields via what he terms the "media elitist complex": [The media] have much more power
https://www.bunkhistory.org/resources/3499
More than 40 years ago, Richard Nixon subtly changed the modern presidency. During past administrations, the American news media had always been referred to as "the press," but Nixon, whose contentious relationship with the nation's newsrooms was longstanding, tweaked that policy, and began labeling the press as "the media," a term he felt sounded more ominous and less favorable.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S1yuyqhl4_Q
Jesse and Auron MacIntyre of BlazeTV discuss what Richard Nixon coined "the Media Elitist complex" and its dangers to America. Nixon argued that while the go
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bb7CWXk9puk
The Richard Nixon Foundation applies the legacy and vision of President Richard Nixon, America's relentless grand strategist, to defining issues facing our n
https://www.theatlantic.com/membership/archive/2018/01/the-other-time-a-president-went-to-war-with-the-media/551522/
It was the newspapers that broke the story of the "Nixon Fund" during the 1952 presidential campaign—the $18,235 collected from wealthy contributors to help pay for his political expenses
https://www.c-span.org/video/?444011-14/richard-nixon-media
Purdue University professor Kathryn Brownell explained how Richard Nixon's media strategy changed from his 1960 presidential campaign loss, through his election in 1968 and during his presidency.
https://www.thefirsttv.com/watch/richard-nixon-and-the-media-elitist-complex-explained/
Jesse and Auron MacIntyre of BlazeTV discuss what Richard Nixon coined "the Media Elitist complex" and its dangers to America. Nixon argued that while the government had checks on its powers, the media was completely unbound by such laws with seemingly no limit to their power or influence. ... the media was completely unbound by such laws
https://www.jstor.org/stable/westhistquar.46.4.0443
the media hyped Nixon's comment and ripped him for prejudging the case, while media critics denounced coverage of his blunder. Manson theatrically ensured that jurors saw a Los Angeles Times headline proclaiming his guilt; his lawyers moved for a mistrial. even though "Nixon understood better than most people the power of the word," his
https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/1081180X05277630
In most political writing, Orwell wrote, the corruption of thought and the corruption of language were evident in "dying metaphors" and "pretentious diction.". Some in the press fell victim to both. Others were beguiled by the theories of Marshall McLuhan. Together, these trends helped Nixon change "the press" into "the media
https://dash.harvard.edu/bitstream/handle/1/37375914/2005_02.pdf?sequence=1
So, as William Safire recalled, In the Nixon White House, the press became `the media,' because the word had a. manipulative, Madison Avenue, all-encompassing connotation, and the press hated it. `Press' conferences became `news' conferences, ostensibly because the word `press' was.
https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/1973/10/01/the-presidency-and-the-press
It is widely believed that Mr. Nixon came to detest the press because of the way it treated him in his 1960 race for the Presidency and in his 1962 race for the governorship of California. But in
https://historynewsnetwork.org/article/6813
Thirty years ago, on August 9, 1974, the Washington Post ran what was then the largest front-page headline in its history: "Nixon Resigns.". That date marked both the end of Richard Nixon's
https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2014/08/nixons-revenge-his-media-strategy-triumphs-40-years-after-resignation/375274/
Nixon Is Gone, but His Media Strategy Lives On. Forty years after Watergate, presidential suspicion of reporters and attempts to keep the press at arm's length remain high. Richard Nixon left the
https://buttondown.email/benbartee/archive/flashback-richard-nixon-trashes-media-elitist/
February 2, 2024 Flashback: Richard Nixon Trashes 'Media-Elitist Complex' Originally published via Armageddon Prose Substack:. Say what you will of Richard Milhous Nixon — I wouldn't describe him as anything remotely like a personal hero of mine — but the man understood the mechanics of power.
https://www.amnews.com/2024/06/27/the-media-industrial-complex-the-fuel-of-richard-nixons-hate-bane-of-american-politicians-and-the-definition-of-opinionated-news/
The media industrial-complex, the fuel of Richard Nixon's hate, bane of American politicians, and the definition of opinionated news. But to know what the media industrial-complex is we must first understand what the media is. Oxford Languages describes the media as "The main means of mass communication." The media industrial-complex is known by Email newsletter […]
https://news.stanford.edu/stories/2018/11/historical-parallels-press-president
In the modern era, two presidents - Richard Nixon and Donald Trump - stand out for conscious efforts to undermine the accountability function of the media. As president-elect, Nixon admonished
https://theconversation.com/richard-nixons-authoritarian-loathing-of-the-media-lives-on-in-donald-trump-73323
Nixon under attack in October 1973. Wikimedia Commons/Office of Presidential Libraries. The beleaguered new president is driving a wedge between his citizens and the media. Nixon would have been
https://www.thenation.com/article/politics/first-televised-presidential-debate-nixon-kennedy/
Ad Policy. John F. Kennedy and Richard Nixon stand at podiums during one of four televised debates in 1960. (Corbis / Corbis via Getty Images) From winner-take-all elections to the Electoral
https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1179/12Z.0000000007
This article examines Nixon's media policy during his trip to China in 1972. Using archival resources and existing literature, this article reconstructs the Nixon administration's media strategy from April 1971 to April 1972, the high time of its rapprochement with the People's Republic of China. ... Nixon and Kissinger: Partners in Power
https://www.history.com/news/presidents-relationship-with-press
Richard Nixon's experience with the press during his campaign against JFK, mainly his perceived loss in their televised 1960 debate, made him acutely aware of the media's power. As a result
https://www.jstor.org/stable/27742771
an elaborate system of media monitoring that substituted for almost all first-hand con sumption of the news. Nixon was not the first president to use his staff to monitor the news, but his monitoring system was more extensive than any of his predecessors.9 More importantly, Nixon was the first president to rely on such monitoring as his primary
https://www.usnews.com/opinion/articles/2024-06-25/rewriting-history-what-really-happened-in-the-jfk-nixon-tv-debate-and-what-it-means-for-the-biden-trump-matchup
Max Frankel, then the executive editor of The New York Times, wrote several months after Nixon's death in 1994 that "Nixon lost a TV debate, and the Presidency, to John F. Kennedy in 1960
https://theconversation.com/what-people-say-today-about-the-first-televised-presidential-debate-between-nixon-and-jfk-doesnt-match-first-reactions-in-1960-231765
The run-up to the Joe Biden-Donald Trump debate at the end of June 2024 has brought reminders about the first-ever televised presidential debate - and how Vice President Richard Nixon's sweaty
https://www.reddit.com/r/RFKjrforprez/comments/1c2skyp/nixon_talking_about_the_power_of_the_media/
Nixon talking about the power of the media It's vital for RFK Jr. to keep using pieces of history from both political parties to win votes. Not only invoking what democrats used to stand for but republicans too. He was doing that with Theodore Roosevelt and the bull moose ticket but he needs to keep doing it and this video might help.
https://www.cnn.com/2024/06/17/us/5-things-pm-june-17-trnd/index.html
👋 Welcome to 5 Things PM! Social media poses a huge threat to children and urgent action is needed, according to the US surgeon general. Dr. Vivek Murthy wants Congress to put warning labels on
https://www.oru.com/en/about-us/media-center/news/2024/06-27/oru-repairing-storm-damage-to-remaining-6894-customers-without-power
For the latest information about power outages, please view O&R's Outage Map. For a brief video that provides a step-by-step guide to the Outage Map's basic operation: In English; In Spanish O&R Warns. For safety's sake, O&R warns the public not to touch or approach any downed wire. Assume the wire is energized and dangerous.
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c1ee8x221lno
Putin warns South Korea against arming Ukraine. ... China is the true power in Putin and Kim's budding friendship. ... Russia blocks dozens of independent media outlets. 1 day ago.
https://www.oru.com/en/about-us/media-center/news/2024/06-26/oru-restoring-service-to-over-30000-customers-who-lost-power-during-thunderstorms
For the latest information about power outages, please view O&R's Outage Map. For a brief video that provides a step-by-step guide to the Outage Map's basic operation: In English; In Spanish O&R Warns. For safety's sake, O&R warns the public not to touch or approach any downed wire. Assume the wire is energized and dangerous.
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/06/21/podcasts/the-daily/americas-top-doctor-on-why-he-wants-warning-labels-on-social-media.html
So let's say that Congress goes along with this, and warning labels start to appear on social media online. We're now almost 20 years since the advent of the smartphone. 2007 was the first iPhone.