Politico-media complex
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The politico-media complex (PMC, also referred to as the political-media complex) is a name that has been given to the close, systematized, symbiotic-like network of relationships between a state's political and ruling classes, its media industry, and any interactions with or dependencies upon interest groups with other domains and agencies, such as law (and its enforcement through the police), corporations and the multinationals. The term PMC is often used to name, derogatively, the collusion between governments or individual politicians and the media industry in an attempt to manipulate rather than inform the people.
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See also
- List of industrial complexes
- Manufacturing Consent
- Freedom of the press
- Fake News
- Great firewall of China
- Hillsborough disaster (The Sun)
- Hillsborough Wikipedia posts
- History of Radio
- KDKA (AM)
- Korean Central News Agency
- Leveson Inquiry
- Media bias in the United States
- Mediacracy
- Press Freedom Index
- PRISM
- Postmodernism
- Post truth politics
- Spin (propaganda)
- The New Totalitarians
- Godi-media
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