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Today, Independence Day, we renew our pledge to serve the people, to continue speaking truth to power, and to guard and defend freedom of the press and of expression from all threats.

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The Silent Media

Native Advertising: Not just a Problem of One

Senatorial campaign was least covered on TV; Aquino most covered by TV Patrol World, 24 Oras


THE CMFR MONITOR OF MEDIA COVERAGE OF THE 2010 ELECTIONS BROADCAST DISCOURSE ANALYSIS (For the periods March 1-5 and 8-12, 2010) Introduction The Center for Media Freedom and Responsibility (CMFR) monitor of the election coverage of TV Patrol World (ABS-CBN), 24 Oras (GMA-7), and Teledyaryo (NBN-4) from March 1...

Same cast takes center stage in weeks 4 and 5 of the election coverage


THE CMFR MONITOR OF MEDIA COVERAGE OF THE 2010 ELECTIONS BROADCAST NEWS TIMEKEEPING REPORT FOR THE PERIOD MARCH 1-12, 2010 The Center for Media Freedom and Responsibility (CMFR) looked at the two major primetime news programs in the country—ABS-CBN 2’s TV Patrol World and GMA 7’s 24 Oras—over the...

Government TV covered Teodoro most, ignored bottom dwellers


THE CMFR MONITOR OF MEDIA COVERAGE OF THE 2010 ELECTIONS BROADCAST DISCOURSE ANALYSIS (For the Period Feb. 9-26, 2010) Scope The programs monitored were 24 Oras, Teledyaryo, and TV Patrol World. The programs 24 Oras (GMA-7) and TV Patrol (ABS-CBN 2) are the leading early evening newscasts in the...

CMFR Monitor of the News Media Coverage of the 2010 National and Local Elections (Feb. 10-27): Aquino was the most covered presidential candidate in print


DISCOURSE  ANALYSIS PRINT (FEB 10-27, 2010) AQUINO WAS THE MOST COVERED PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE Print focused on the presidential campaign to the neglect of the senatorial and party list elections The Liberal Party’s Benigno Simeon “Noynoy” Cojuangco Aquino III was the most covered candidate in the country’s three biggest newspapers...

CMFR Monitor of Political Advertisements (February 9-27): The most moneyed candidates were also the most covered by television


In 2004, relatively-unknown trade secretary Manuel “Mar” Roxas ran for senator. Spending 73% of his campaign finances on advertisements, Mr. Palengke, as his advertisements tagged him, made it to the Senate with the most votes. After two attempts, unknown and holding no position in the government , Ma. Ana...

The Center for Media Freedom and Responsibility Monitor of Media Coverage of the May 2010 Elections (For the period Feb 9-27, 2010)


CMFR has been monitoring media coverage of Philippine elections since 1992, and reporting the results through the Philippine Journalism Review and, in 2004 and 2007, in special publications. For 2010 it is monitoring selected news broadcasts by major Manila based networks and the reporting by the Manila based broadsheets...

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ABOUT US

CMFR was organized in 1989 as a private, non-stock, non-profit organization involving the different sectors of society in the task of building up the press and news media as a pillar of democratic society. Its programs uphold press freedom, promote responsible journalism, and encourage journalistic excellence.

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Center for Media Freedom and Responsibility
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