Note: this is actually version 3.1 of The Chart. I made some minor changes from version 3.0, explained here: http://www.allgeneralizationsarefalse.com/chart-3-1-minor-updates-based-constructive-feedback/
Summary: What’s new in this chart:
- I edited the categories on the vertical axis to more accurately describe the contents of the news sources ranked therein (long discussion below).
- I stuffed as many sources (from both version 1.0 and 2.0, plus some new ones) on here as I could, in response to all the “what about ______ source” questions I got. Now the logos are pretty tiny. If you have a request for a ranking of a particular source, let me know in the comments.
- I changed the subheading under “Hyper-Partisan” from “questionable journalistic value” to “expressly promotes views.” This is because “hyper-partisan” does not always mean that the facts reported in the stories are necessarily “questionable.” Some analysis sources in these columns do good fact-finding in support of their expressly partisan stances. I didn’t want anyone to think those sources were necessarily “bad” just because they hyper-partisan (though they could be “bad” for other reasons.
- I added a key that indicates what the circles and ellipses mean. They mean that a source within a particular circle or ellipse can often have stories that fall within that circle/ellipse’s range. This is, of course, not true for all sources
- Green/Yellow/Orange/Red Key. Within each square: Green is news, yellow is fair interpretations of the news, orange is unfair interpretations of the news, and red is nonsense damaging to public discourse.
Just read this one more thing: It’s best to think of the position of a source as a weighted average position of the stories within each source. That is, I rank some sources in a particular spot because most of its stories fall in that spot. However, I weight the ranking downward is if it has a significant number of stories (even if they are a minority) that fall in the orange or red areas. For example, if Daily Kos has 75% of its stories fall under yellow (e.g., “analysis,” and “opinion, fair”), but 25% fall under orange (selective, unfair, hyper-partisan), it is rated overall in the orange. I rank them like this is because, in my view, the orange and red-type content is damaging to the overall media landscape, and if a significant enough number of stories fall in that category, readers should rely on it less. This is a subjective judgment on my part, but I think it is defensible.
OK, you can go now unless you just really love reading about this media analysis stuff. News nerds, proceed for more discussion about ranking the news.
As I discussed in my post entitled “The Chart, Second Edition: What Makes a News Source Good?” the most accurate and helpful way to analyze a news source is to analyze its individual stories, and the most accurate way to analyze an individual story is to analyze its individual sentences. I recently started a blog series where I rank individual stories on this chart and provide a written analysis that scores the article itself on a sentence-by-sentence basis, and separately scores the title, graphics, lede, and other visual elements. See a couple of examples here. Categorizing and ranking the news is hard to do because there are so very many factors. But I’m convinced that the most accurate way to analyze and categorize news is to look as closely at it as possible, and measure everything about it that is measurable. I think we can improve our media landscape by doing this and coming up with novel and accurate ways to rank and score the news, and then teaching others how to do the same. If you like how I analyze articles in my blog series, and have a request for a particular article, let me know in the comments. I’m interested in talking about individual articles, and what makes them good and bad, with you.
As I’ve been analyzing articles on an element-by element, sentence-by-sentence basis, it became apparent to me that individual elements and sentences can be ranked or categorized in several ways, and that my chart needed some revisions for accuracy.
So far I have settled on at least three different dimensions, or metric, upon which an individual sentence can be ranked. These are 1) the Veracity metric, 2) the Expression metric, and 3) the Fairness metric
The primary way statements are currently evaluated in the news are on the basis of truthfulness, which is arguably the most important ranking metric. Several existing fact-checking sites, such as Politifact and Washington Post Fact Checker, use a scale to rate the veracity of statements; Politifact has six levels and Washington Post Fact Checker has four, reflecting that many statements are not entirely either true or false. I score each sentence on a similar “Veracity” metric, as follows:
- True and Complete
- Mostly True/ True but Incomplete
- Mixed True and False
- Mostly False or Misleading
- False
Since there are many reputable organizations that do this type of fact-checking work, according to well-established industry standards, (see, e.g., Poynter International Fact Checking Network), I do not replicate this work myself but rather rely on these sources for fact checking.
It is valid and important to rate articles and statements for truthfulness. But it is apparent that sentences can vary in quality in other ways. One way, which I discussed in my previous post (The Chart, Second Edition: What makes a News Source ‘Good’) is on what I call an “Expression” scale of fact-to-opinion. The Expression scale I use goes like this:
- (Presented as) Fact
- (Presented as) Fact/Analysis (or persuasively-worded fact)
- (Presented as) Analysis (well-supported by fact, reasonable)
- (Presented as) Analysis/Opinion (somewhat supported by fact)
- (Presented as) Opinion (unsupported by facts or by highly disputed facts)
In ranking stories and sentences, I believe it is important to distinguish between fact, analysis, and opinion, and to value fact-reporting as more essential to news than either analysis or opinion. Opinion isn’t necessarily bad, but it’s important to distinguish that it is not news, which is why I rank it lower on the chart than analysis or fact reporting.
Note that the ranking here includes whether something is “presented as” fact, analysis, etc. This Expression scale focuses on the syntax and intent of the sentence, but not necessarily the absolute veracity. For example, a sentence could be presented as a fact but may be completely false or completely true. It wouldn’t be accurate to characterize a false statement, presented as fact, as an “opinion.” A sentence presented as opinion is one that provides a strong conclusion, but can’t truly be verified or debunked, because it is a conclusion based on too many individual things. I’ll write more on this metric separately, but for now, I submit that it is an important one because it is a second dimension of ranking that can be applied consistently to any sentence. Also, I submit that a false or misleading statement that is presented as a fact is more damaging to a sentence’s credibility than a false or misleading statement presented as mere opinion.
The need for another metric became apparent when asking the question “what is this sentence for?” of each and every sentence. Sometimes, a sentence that is completely true and presented as fact can strike a reader as biased for some reason. There are several ways in which a sentence can be “biased,” even if true. For example, sentences that are not relevant to the current story, or not timely, or that provide a quote out of context, can strike a reader as unfair because they appear to be inserted merely for the purpose of persuasion. It is true that readers can be persuaded by any kind of fact or opinion, but it seems “fair” to use certain facts and opinions to persuade while unfair to use other kinds.
I submit that the following characteristics of sentences can make them seem unfair:
-Not relevant to present story
-Not timely
-Ad hominem (personal) attacks
-Name-calling
-Other character attacks
-Quotes inserted to prove the truth of what the speaker is saying
-Sentences including persuasive facts but which omit facts that would tend to prove the opposite point
-Emotionally-charged adjectives
-Any fact, analysis, or opinion statement that is based on false, misleading, or highly disputed premises
This is not an exhaustive list of what makes a sentence unfair, and I suspect that the more articles I analyze, the more accurate and comprehensive I can make this list over time. I welcome feedback on what other characteristics make a sentence unfair, and I’ll write more on this metric in the future. Admittedly, many of these factors have a subjective component. Some of the standards I used to make a call on whether a sentence was “fair” or unfair” are the same ones in the Federal Rules of Evidence (i.e., the ones that judges use to rule on objections in court). These rules define complex concepts such as relevance and permissible character evidence, and determine what is fair for a jury to consider in court. I have a sense that a similar set of comprehensive rules for legal evidence could be developed for journalism fairness. For now, these initial identifiers of fairness metric helped me distinguish the presence of unfair sentences in articles. I now use a “Fairness” metric in addition to the Veracity scale and the Expression scale. This metric only has two measures, and therefore requires a call to be made between:
- Fair
- Unfair
By identifying a percentage of sentences that were unfair, I was able to gain an additional perspective on what an overall article was doing, which helped me create some more accurate descriptions of types of articles on the vertical quality axis. In my previous chart (second edition), the fact-to-opinion metric was the primary basis for the vertical ranking descriptions, so it looked like this:
In using all three metrics, 1) the Veracity scale, 2), the fact-to-opinion Expression scale, and 3) the Fairness scale, I came up with what I believe are more accurate descriptions of article types, which looks like this:
As shown, the top three categories are the same, but the lower ranked categories are more specifically described than in the previous version. The new categories are “Opinion; Fair Persuasion,” “Selective or Incomplete Story; Unfair Persuasion,” “Propaganda/Contains Misleading Facts,” and “Contains Inaccurate/ Fabricated Info.” If you look at the news sources that fall into these categories, I think you’ll find that these descriptions more accurately describe many of the stories within the sources.
Thanks for reading about my media categorizing endeavors. I believe it is possible (though difficult) to categorize the news, and that doing so accurately is a worthy endeavor. In future posts and chart editions I’ll dive into other metrics I’ve been using and refining, such as those pertaining to partisanship, topic focus (e.g., story selection bias), and news source ownership.
If you would like a blank version for education purposes, here you go:
And here is a lower-resolution version for download on mobile devices:
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533 Comments on "The Chart, Version 3.0: What, Exactly, Are We Reading?"
Where is Vice News?
Here: http://www.allgeneralizationsarefalse.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/11/Vice-News.pdf
Hi Vanessa, you might want to take a closer look at Natural News. They are far from left/liberal. In fact many of their articles skew borderline alt-right.
Yes. See other comments about Natural News. I think I have some good reasons for placing them there, but I will likely move them in the next edition.
They explicitly support Trump. How are they possibly on the left? There are no good reasons.
I think there is some truth though that there are commonalities between ultra-left and ultra-right. Both for instance seem to be comfortable with draconian enforcement of their views.
I would think that’s similar to David Wolfe based on what I’ve seen, though I try to avoid his posts as much as possible
Hi Vanessa! I think you’re really on to something here. I’d have to contemplate several different sections more intently to have any real comment about your process. Having said that its surprising about half the rankings dont intuituvely make sense to me. So question- have you considered streamlining your teview process such that you could pull in a mixed group of about 25 people from both the right and left to provide their analysis and rerank based in that? Good display that as an alternative assessment not replace the current version.
Hi Renee. Yes, I have considered getting more consensus. I think that would be valuable.
Having the public evaluate individual sentences could be really interestii am thinking some along the lines of galxyzoo, a project that let the public classify galaxies. I could envision providing the public with sentences from articles and they have to evaluate after a shirt training period. Check out zooniverse.org on how set one up.
That’s a great idea. Thanks!
If you want to do that in a semi-scientific way, you’d have to put together a panel whose views span the general populace. I’ve chewed on that idea myself. Not easy to do, but would be worth it, I think.
Great info, thank you!
Would like to see “The Atlantic” listed. Thank you.
It’s there!
Studied your chart and turned on CNN to give them another chance. I had to turn it because they showed a half naked Russian lady in jail in Thailand who said she had secrets about Trump. How do you rate Special Report on Fox?
Hopefully you don’t interpret my rating of CNN as kind or complimentary. It’s not up there with anything I actually recommend.
Yes, where is Vice News?
Thanks for this, it’s fantastic!!
It is here: http://www.allgeneralizationsarefalse.com/single-source-news-ratings/
Hi Vanessa. Do I understand that this chart is based on articles off a particular news source website? This chart has nothing to do with news shows on TV?-right?
It is actually a mix of TV shows and website news article, where applicable.
Please add Truthdig to the list they have been around as long as the Huffington Post
and you might look at TYT
Will do.
I agree on the TYT
Thank you for updating, Vanessa!
Based on your first chart, I started following only the sources in the gray circle and the green oval and dropped everything else. One of the sources I started reading was The Hill, and I would argue that it skews more liberal than is demonstrated in your charts.
Having said that, I think your analysis is fantastic and I share it with my college students to help them evaluate the quality of media sources.
Thanks for the feedback. I agree that it seems more liberal lately, but I think it is because of their tendency to report on petty, palace-intrigue type of stories, of which there are a lot during this administration. For example, they have a lot of “stories” about what Trump or Trump Jr. just tweeted, which seems liberal because those stories tend to be embarrassing. Glad you use it to teach media literacy!
I agree. Before the election, I definitely felt it leaned right.
it is funny i used to read the Hill and found it far right something must have happened ???same with Politico ???
Great points, Vanessa. If this is the case, then I’m guessing it will drop vertically on your next iteration. Not really complex analysis going on there…
Where is Fox News? I don’t see it on the chart except for the Daily Wire.
It is right above Daily Wire–those are two separate logos.
Since many reputable sources report that President Trump learns much of his “policy” information from FOX & FRIENDS, perhaps it’s time to add them as a separate category. My assumption is that they’d end up down near InfoWars, but I’d like to see your opinion.
Great work!
Wall Street Journal = minimal partisan bias.
No, seriously? It’s just more articulate version of Fox. It’s why stuff like this is so dangerously wrong. You’ve defined the center-right/rightist Establishment as “the center” and then located everything relative to the right-wing Establishment.
I understand that it’s difficult to represent this on a simple, two-dimensional acid, but I would categorize their promotion of climate change denier as dangerously wrong.
I don’t disagree. But that would be better reflected on an individual ranking of that particular article you are referring to.
If both sides complain equally, then you know you are correct. 😉
It’s what I strive for, I guess 😉
Not necessarily. We might need to be cautious about what I call the fallacy of the Golden Mean.
I agree Sheldon. There has been much research lately on how in an attempt to show no media bias some media have been skewing at least the appearance of facts, particularly in regards to Global Warming. Having one climate scientist sitting with one climate denier gives an invalid weight to the denier. Similar things can occur in writing if equal space is allowed to what are clearly not equally valid points of view.
I think you need to separate the WSJ reporting from the WSJ editorials/opinion pieces.
I agree. The most accurate way to rank would be on an article-by-article basis. I’ll be putting out versions of charts with more specific detail like that.
So what I hear you saying is that in addition to an analysis by publication and perhaps by article, you want an analysis by major topics like climate change, gun laws, immigration, EPA?
I agree with Dennis. WSJ news staff may be only moderately right-biased, but their editorials are hyper right-wing-extremist.
Thanks for the feedback. I’m looking at several of the other ways of measuring that you mention.
I believe you are correct. I am working on a number of different versions to convey such ideas, and this is at the top of the list. Thanks!
Fair points on all.
I agree with his! Great points. And great chart!
Please excuse my typos. I’m typing on a smart phone with an injured hand and two cats on my lap. I clicked send a bit too quickly and missed my chance to proofread!
Very interesting. I am always in question with each news source when hearing about a new story. People tend to say one source is pushing one view or the other. It is very positive to see some of the main stream outlets (abc, NBC, cbs, wallstreet, npr) in the fact/mainstream section. Thanks for taking the time to provide this type of information. I don’t have the time to do things like this!
Where is Salon?
I’ll be following up on individual requests like these shortly–I have a lot of them though, so thanks for your patience.
Pretty sure you have had a lot of requests for this but The Young Turks are pretty big now and should be adressed here.
Thanks.
Awesome work! My aunt shared this on fb.
I get some news from independent.co.uk and would be interested in where that source falls within the metrics. Thank you.
I’ll be following up on individual requests like these shortly–I have a lot of them though, so thanks for your patience.
I would urge you to look at TalkingPointsMemo. I _think_ they’ve got enough of a readership to be considered in a broad study like this. They have many active investigative journalists and have been active for over 15 years. I consider them left leaning but reliable. I’d be interested in seeing your take.
Thanks for this analysis. It’s really good to have a summarized graphic for reference when someone brings up a “news source”.
Thanks! I’ll be following up on individual requests like these shortly–I have a lot of them though, so thanks for your patience.
That’s the first one I looked for too.
Great job Vanessa. I think you greatly improved the chart’s accuracy.
Where are the Young Turks?
I’ll be following up on individual requests like these shortly–I have a lot of them though, so thanks for your patience.
I’m interested in knowing where they are too.
this is so helpful and interesting. Did I miss GQ and New York magazine in the graphic?
I’ll be following up on individual requests like these shortly–I have a lot of them though, so thanks for your patience.
Have you considered where specific shows might land on the grid? For example, I see where MSNBC is placed, but I’m curious where you might place Rachel Maddow in relation to that… or how her show contributes to the placement you ultimately decided on.
TYT news?
I’ll be following up on individual requests like these shortly–I have a lot of them though, so thanks for your patience.
Thank you for your work. Can you tell us what logo is under CNN?
There’s nothing directly under CNN (e.g., behind it–that’s just how the logo came out), but farther down, if that’s what you’re talking about, is Real Farmacy.
I don’t see the Wall Street Journal, which I would say is middle Conservative.
It’s on there. I agree.
Where would you rate ProPublica?
I’ll be following up on individual requests like these shortly–I have a lot of them though, so thanks for your patience.
Is there a reason you did not list the Sinclair Broadcast Group?
Yes, because it is an ownership group and not a particular outlet. I rank the outlets rather than ownership group. I am aware of their political slant and forays into local news.
Great stuff! Congrats and thanks! With just a little tweaking, this could also be a guide to just having a quality discussion intended to understand and explore, rather than dismiss and overcome.
Thanks for providing this well thought out and well presented information. Did I just over look “Salon” or was it not rated?
It’s not on there, but I will follow up on individual requests!
Clearly your opinion is biased. CNN reputable? And your other posts are clearly trying to manipulate Trump supporters. Trump is the best thing this country has seen all century. If you cannot understand why the country is thrilled Hillary lost it is futile to explain. Good luck and stop crying.
I agree that my opinion is biased.
You rock, Vanessa! Great assertive response: find something to agree with. 🙂
Compared to all the other constructive and thoughtful comments here, including those that disagree with Vanessa, yours is the only one that sounds like “crying”. Congrats.
Vice news?
See http://www.allgeneralizationsarefalse.com/single-source-news-ratings/
I appreciate your comment about an infotainment scale. I recommend you look at mine about corporatocratic bias in the media. I expect there would be a great overlap in the two categories.
I cannot savec the image or read it on my mobile device. Please makr the image donwloadable.
Ok, there is now a lower-resolution image at the end of the post. See if that helps.
Thank you for your efforts. Not everyone will agree, but it certainly gives them a metric to work with. I wish more people considered the source.
Hi Ann! Glad to hear about how you use it. Many other college professors and high school teachers are doing the same. There’s a link to a blank one with the rectangles toward the end of this post.
The only thing wrong is that infowars should have broken off the chart to the bottom and be starting its own chart that calls all other charts fake news. I mean, Louise Mensch is a weird conspiracy theorist, but not “JFK and Hitler are both alive on the secret UN moon base with the lizard people leaders of the Illuminati” level weird conspiracy.
Haha, fair point. Just think of the distances on the chart between sources as not absolutely relative or to scale.
Forbes? I have the impression that it’s generally a bit to the right, but some articles are definitely outliers in that assessment.
Also interested in TYT, Jimmy Dore, and Independent.co.uk as others have requested.
I agree about Forbes…close to WSJ or Fiscal Times. Will follow up on those.
Do you have a spreadsheet with the actual values given to each outlet or could you zoom in on the grey circle? It’s really messy and some items I don’t know if that is actually where they are or if its just best fit for the image. An interactive chart where you have the dots for locations and mouse over to see the outlet would be nice.
I’m working on a version like that. Thanks!
This is a brilliant chart Vanessa, thanks for the update.
Can you elaborate on why you chose to place MSNBC higher than Fox News? Maybe because I skew somewhat conservative it seems odd, but every time I turn on MSNBC it’s Rachel Maddow or that guy with the stupid glasses doing some really biased hit job. I’m not fan of Fox News but they seem like both sides of the same coin.
as an observer, I like the concept of this chart but have the authors themselves done any political analysis of themselves against the political scaling? I think the chart is greatly skewed to a liberal perspective. The fact that you have CNN positioned where it is shows your own built-in progressive bias which significantly taints the accuracy and reliability of your rankings.
Great question. Please see what I wrote about my own bias here: http://www.allgeneralizationsarefalse.com/faq/
On CNN, see here http://www.allgeneralizationsarefalse.com/everybody-has-an-opinion-on-cnn/
The up-down axis seems solid, but I’m not sure about the left-right one. Why is Jacobin to the right of Occupy Democrats?
That doesn’t make sense. Democratic Socialism is considered “to the left” of any flavor of liberalism by any measure. Focusing on economics over other social issues doesn’t change that.
Wow! This chart should be in the national news!
Vanessa, it’s good and useful work and I’m impressed. Being an amateur linguist, I can see some areas of congruence between your work and my fiddling around. You may have to break the chart down into segments, just to be as inclusive and detailed as possible. I wonder if or where you would consider putting satire and political humor articles or do they need to be on a different chart ? I mean, MAD magazine has been a major influence on adolescent thought for years.
Thanks. I’ve avoided putting satire on here because I do think it needs its own chart. Any axes ranking comedy would have to account for the format and language of the comedy, and that would be a whole other level of linguistic analysis. Further, I’ve had a hard time finding any good or popular conservative satire. If anyone can point me towards some, I’d love to see.
I love this! Great work! When you have time I’m curious where you’d put the Daily Skimm.
Will add it to my list!
Please encourage C-Span to use this chart whenever they have a guest on.
C-Span should be at the top center.
hey, did you consider ranking Business Insider, too?
On my list!
great map! really interesting! did you consider ranking Business Insider, too?
On my list!
First, thank you so much for your work! I’m sure this must have taken a great deal of time! I saw it on one of my Facebook friends walls and shared it onto my page. In these times it is now more important than ever to know which news agencies we can count on to give us the truth so that we can make informed decisions. Thank you! What a wonderful public service you have done!❤️
First, thank you so much for your work! I’m sure this must have taken a great deal of time! I saw it on one of my Facebook friends walls and shared it onto my page. In these times it is now more important than ever to get to the news agencies that will give us the truth so that we can make informed decisions. Thank you! What a wonderful public service you have done!❤️
Thanks so much!
I’d like to request The Daily Show and Last Week Tonight. Personally, I think TDS would probably fall near Mother Jones, and LWT near The New Yorker. Both clearly have a somewhat liberal slant, but their primary target has always been absurdity.
I’ve so far avoided comedy and satire for a couple of reasons. The first is that sarcasm, irony, and other comedic tropes add a different linguistic dimension to analyze. The second is that I am not familiar with really any popular comedy shows our sources that appear to skew conservative. I would like to think about why that is before diving in and trying to rank them.
Please add CBC (cbc.ca) CTV News (ctvnews.ca) and The Star (thestar.com)
I’m wondering if the size of the heading has any content/context. If not it could be used to represent the breadth of the two axes. Meaning, for example, the extent to which National Review skews between conservative and h.p. conservative. More work but maybe makes the tool even more interesting/informative.
Thanks!
Right now, neither the vertical or horizontal categories represent a particular scale of measurement. That is a good idea though. Will work on something like that for future versions!
I’d love to see your take on Teen Vogue. Seems some days like they’re making some respected publishers look like highschool newspapers.
Legalize marijuana. Legalize or regulate recreational drugs.
Legalize all adult consensual sexual activity. End government restrictions on abortion.
End police violence. End justice systems that prey on the poor, uneducated, and minorities.
Protect the 1st and 4th amendments. Restore rights to criminal defendants.
End wars. Reduce military spending–drastically.
Borders are arbitrary. Everyone should have the right to travel (immigrate) wherever they want.
Separate church and state. Give LGBT the same marriage rights as heterosexuals.
Q: Guess which organization this is.
Huffington Post?
Democracy Now?
A: Reason
Well said, Jeremy. Thank you.
Have you thought about making this a more interactive version? Something database-driven that can update automatically as you enter additional articles etc; that can be filtered by the viewer for specific networks/sources, and perhaps by timespan? I think this has potential to be a powerful tool if it can continue as such.
Yes–I’m already working on it! Stay tuned. But please keep the suggestions coming. I’m sure there are a lot of useful ways to visualize the information people want that I haven’t thought of.
The owner of Natural News is a libertarian.
Partisan ratings here are more a function of the content of the article and who tends to pick them up and share them–not necessarily the ownership of the source. I think the owners of most ridiculous sites, unfortunately, know what they are doing and take advantage of gullible people.
I dunno, the natural health crazy that Natural News caters to seems to know no side. My pretty conservative mother would send me things from them and Mercola. I’ve also seen a ton of anti-Obama/anti-Democrat rants within the articles on NN.
Interesting thought. A sentiment analysis of the comments section of a story could provide a separate way to measure both axes.
I would say that Natural News has some articles that might be considered liberal, though in the last election they supported Trump. It would be interesting to see a discussion of terms “liberal” and “conservative.” I think Natural News crosses those lines, though I agree that either way it’s a terrible source for news.
Fabulous work, Vanessa. Much appreciated. Keep the updates coming!
Thanks!
I can comprehend why you placed MSNBC there, but not why NBC News isn’t right next to it, because they are the same operation. CNN’s place that low is questionable. And, it seems like the legacy of the Big 3 evening newscasts is influence their respective organizations place on the chart even though CBS News has a decidedly left leaning slant compared to ABC News or PBS Newshour for example. The categories and distinctions are good though.
NBC is such a large organization that I think its subsidiaries (and/or affiliates) are worth distinguishing. By “NBC,” I mean their nightly news, website, and reporting services. I think most people think of MSNBC and CNBC as distinct enough entities with different political slants. As for CNN–everyone has a different opinion about them, and I’ll probably dedicate a whole future chart to them.