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Related: About this forumWatching TeleSUR English, Venezuela's State-Backed News Site For English Speaking Audiences
Watching TeleSUR English, Venezuela's State-Backed News Site For English Speaking Audiences
By Brianna Lee@briannacleeb.lee@ibtimes.com
on August 15 2014 8:23 AM
Hugo Chavez, the late Venezuelan president, set off panic buttons among some U.S. officials in 2005 when he launched TeleSUR, a state-backed television news network he hoped would spread his message of Bolivarian socialism -- and even rival what he said was CNNs influence in the region. The networks president, Andres Izarra, called it an initiative against cultural imperialism. U.S. Rep. Connie Mack, a Florida Republican, called it antiAmerican, antifreedom rhetoric.
Nine years later, TeleSUR has outlived U.S. protests and the Comandante himself -- and its trying to woo young, digital audiences in the U.S. and the U.K. with an English-language news site, which launched on July 25. TeleSUR English hasn't made a big splash in English-speaking media circles, but the network is trying to grow its base, evidenced by a full-page ad it recently took out in the New Yorker magazine. And while TeleSUR Englishs leftist slant predictably pervades its coverage, its U.S. features are surprisingly tuned in to many of the pressing social issues that affect communities throughout the country.
Like its Spanish-language counterpart, TeleSUR English receives the bulk of its funding from the Venezuelan government, with additional backing from the governments of Cuba, Ecuador, Argentina, Bolivia, and Nicaragua. With that sort of patronage, its not exactly a model of independence and objectivity, and its biases are often glaringly obvious.
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The sites U.S. features, however, bear none of the kind of incendiary rhetoric that the countrys leaders have at times had for the U. S. A weekly video program titled The Real USA, which has broadcast three 20-minute episodes so far, zeroes in on the same pressing social issues in the country that many U.S. outlets have delved into: income inequality, police violence, poverty and immigrant communities. Its most recent episode, released Aug.t 12, featured segments on San Franciscos soaring rents, urban migration in Denver, an Arizona man who attempts to rescue migrants crossing the border in extreme weather conditions, and an undocumented lawyers fight for U.S. citizenship. Another program, Américans, produced in collaboration with U.S.-based website Latino Rebels, features a long segment on Mayan millennial communities in the U.S., something that one might be hard-pressed to find in U.S. mainstream outlets.
More:
http://www.ibtimes.com/watching-telesur-english-venezuelas-state-backed-news-site-english-speaking-audiences-1659180
Demeter
(85,373 posts)can hardly point accusing fingers at anyone else.