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The military–industrial–media complex is an offshoot of the military–industrial complex. Organizations like Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting have accused the military industrial media complex of using their media resources to promote militarism, which, according to Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting's hypothesis, benefits the defense resources of the company and allows for a controlled narrative of armed conflicts. In this way, media coverage can be manipulated to show increased effectiveness of weapons systems and to avoid covering civilian casualties, or reducing the emphasis on them. Examples of such coverage include that of the Persian Gulf War, NATO bombing of Yugoslavia and the Iraq War. It is a common practice by defense contractors and weapons systems manufacturers to hire former

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  • The military–industrial–media complex is an offshoot of the military–industrial complex. Organizations like Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting have accused the military industrial media complex of using their media resources to promote militarism, which, according to Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting's hypothesis, benefits the defense resources of the company and allows for a controlled narrative of armed conflicts. In this way, media coverage can be manipulated to show increased effectiveness of weapons systems and to avoid covering civilian casualties, or reducing the emphasis on them. Examples of such coverage include that of the Persian Gulf War, NATO bombing of Yugoslavia and the Iraq War. It is a common practice by defense contractors and weapons systems manufacturers to hire former military personnel as media spokespersons. In 2008, The New York Times found that approximately 75 military analysts – many with military industry ties – were being investigated by the Government Accountability Office and other federal organizations for taking part in a years-long campaign to influence them into becoming "surrogates" for the Bush administration's military policy in the media. (en)
  • Le cinéma de sécurité nationale est une expression utilisée par Jean-Michel Valantin pour décrire les relations entre Hollywood, le complexe militaro-industriel américain et le gouvernement des États-Unis. Dans son interprétation la plus large, le cinéma de sécurité nationale correspond à une grande partie des films de guerre américains de l'après-guerre. Mais cette désignation regroupe aussi certains westerns dont le contenu idéologique a été transposé au contexte géopolitique vécu par les États-Unis au moment de la sortie de ces œuvres de fiction. Le concept s'inscrit dans une dimension plus vaste qui pourrait être désignée sous le nom de complexe militaro-médiatique, terme laissant entendre l'existence d'une collusion d'intérêts entre les industriels de l'armement et les entreprises de média aux États-Unis. La critique induite par ce terme inclut le soupçon que ces médias assurent la promotion du militarisme parmi leurs auditeurs de la population civile. (fr)
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dbp:date
  • December 2021 (en)
dbp:reason
  • No clue of whether it means they got good coverage, or they later should get worse coverage as a debt retribution. (en)
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  • The military–industrial–media complex is an offshoot of the military–industrial complex. Organizations like Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting have accused the military industrial media complex of using their media resources to promote militarism, which, according to Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting's hypothesis, benefits the defense resources of the company and allows for a controlled narrative of armed conflicts. In this way, media coverage can be manipulated to show increased effectiveness of weapons systems and to avoid covering civilian casualties, or reducing the emphasis on them. Examples of such coverage include that of the Persian Gulf War, NATO bombing of Yugoslavia and the Iraq War. It is a common practice by defense contractors and weapons systems manufacturers to hire former (en)
  • Le cinéma de sécurité nationale est une expression utilisée par Jean-Michel Valantin pour décrire les relations entre Hollywood, le complexe militaro-industriel américain et le gouvernement des États-Unis. Dans son interprétation la plus large, le cinéma de sécurité nationale correspond à une grande partie des films de guerre américains de l'après-guerre. Mais cette désignation regroupe aussi certains westerns dont le contenu idéologique a été transposé au contexte géopolitique vécu par les États-Unis au moment de la sortie de ces œuvres de fiction. (fr)
rdfs:label
  • Cinéma de sécurité nationale (fr)
  • Military–industrial–media complex (en)
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