// Media Criticism & Source Literacy

How mainstream
media shapes you

A guide to documented propaganda techniques — illustrated with real news examples. This knowledge helps you become a more critical media consumer, regardless of political orientation.

Propaganda techniques are used by media across the entire political spectrum — right, left and center. This site has no political agenda — its sole purpose is to raise media-critical awareness.

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What is media propaganda?

Propaganda is not always about obvious lies. It is just as often about what is omitted, how news is framed, which voices are selected — and which topics ever make it onto the agenda in the first place.

Modern media operate within complex structures of ownership interests, advertising revenue, political networks and editorial cultures. This creates systematic distortions that do not necessarily stem from malice — but that nonetheless shape what we think we know.

Below are seven well-documented techniques, described by researchers and media scholars, illustrated with real and verified cases.

Manufacturing Consent Noam Chomsky & Edward S. Herman, 1988

The most influential academic model for how commercial media systematically shape public opinion.

Network Propaganda Benkler, Faris & Roberts — Oxford University Press, 2018

Academic analysis of how mainstream media can be manipulated into spreading disinformation.

01
Framing
Agenda Setting

Media decide not just how a story is told — they decide which stories are told at all. What is not reported barely exists in public consciousness.

Documented case — Fallujah 2004
Noam Chomsky compared the extensive US media coverage of the Afghan War Diaries with the near-total absence of reporting on serious health problems documented in Fallujah after the US assault.
02
Framing
Framing

The same event can be described in radically different ways depending on the words, images and context chosen. A person can be called a "freedom fighter" or a "terrorist" — the facts are identical, but the framing steers interpretation.

Documented case — British tabloid headlines
The propaganda model highlights how British tabloids used simplified and dehumanizing headlines that reduce complex wars to simple confrontations between good and evil.
03
Omission
Selective Information & Strategic Omission (Card Stacking)

This technique involves presenting facts that are individually correct but omitting the information that would change the overall picture. It is not necessarily a lie — it is a careful selection of truths. The technique is especially effective because the audience has no way of knowing what has been left out.

04
Manipulation
Appeal to Authority

By elevating experts or institutions to "truth sources" without scrutiny, an automatic credibility stamp is created. The audience trusts the conclusion because of who said it, not because they have verified the evidence themselves.

Documented case — Pentagon media analysts
The NYT revealed that Pentagon officials supplied TV networks' news analysts with "special information" that was then presented as independent expert analysis on air — a coordinated information operation.
05
Manipulation
Repetition (Big Lie)

A claim repeated often enough begins to be perceived as truth — especially when media limit or suppress counter-narratives. The illusory truth effect is a well-documented cognitive phenomenon.

Documented — The WMD myth persists
A study found that 42% of Americans still incorrectly believed that US troops had found weapons of mass destruction in Iraq — despite no WMDs having been found. Repetition had embedded the false claim.
06
Manipulation
Fake News Segments (Video News Releases)

Government agencies and PR firms produce ready-made news segments that look like ordinary reporting but are paid communication operations. When broadcast without disclosure, viewers believe they are watching independent journalism.

07
Structural bias
Ownership Power & Advertising Filter (Structural Bias)

Media companies are owned by large conglomerates with broad business interests. This creates a built-in conflict of interest: newsrooms rarely publish stories that harm the owner's other businesses. This is not conspiracy — it is structural incentive.

The five filters that
control the news flow

I
Ownership
Corporate-owned media avoid stories that harm the owner's other business interests.
II
Advertising Revenue
Advertisers are the primary revenue source — critical coverage risks costing money.
III
Source Dependency
Governments and corporations are dominant news sources — giving them enormous editorial influence.
IV
"Flak"
Organized pushback against critical journalism — lobbying, lawsuits and political pressure that deter editors.
V
Dominant Ideology
A shared worldview that invisibly shapes what is considered "reasonable" to report — the water journalists swim in.

AI Propaganda Tracker

Paste text or a URL from a news article and let the AI identify propaganda techniques, assign a score and analyze the angle. Powered by Grok AI. Swedish sources focused.

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How to protect yourself

?
Ask what is missing
Every article makes choices about what to include. Always ask: are there perspectives, voices or facts that are conspicuously absent?
🏛
Check who owns the outlet
Find out who owns the publication and what other business interests they have. Ownership shapes coverage in ways that are rarely explicit.
📐
Compare source to source
The primary source often differs significantly from how media reference it. Go back to the original document, study or data.
Be skeptical of emotional urgency
News that creates strong fear, anger or urgency deserves extra scrutiny. Emotional arousal reduces critical thinking.
🔄
Read media you normally dislike
Consuming only media we already agree with creates an echo chamber filter that distorts reality.
Give news time
Many "breaking news" stories are corrected, nuanced or collapse entirely in the following days. Patience is a critical-thinking tool.

Latest analyses

The AI analysis identified three propaganda techniques in yesterday's main broadcast, with a combined score of 6.2/10.
Analysis | Propagandaanalys.com • 2026-03-12
This week's top-3 most one-sided reports based on AI-powered propaganda analysis.
Weekly report | Propagandaanalys.com • 2026-03-10
An examination of how the two channels framed the same climate report over one week.
Study | Propagandaanalys.com • 2026-03-07
PropagandaTracker can now automatically find today's most loaded SVT article and analyze it.
Update | Propagandaanalys.com • 2026-03-05