this post was submitted on 12 May 2024
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Improve The News is a free news aggregator and news analysis site developed by a group of researchers at MIT and elsewhere to improve your access to trustworthy news. Many website algorithms push you (for ad revenue) into a filter bubble by reinforcing the narratives you impulse-click on. By understanding other people’s arguments, you understand why they do what they do – and have a better chance of persuading them. **What's establishment bias?** The establishment view is what all big parties and powers agree on, which varies between countries and over time. For example, the old establishment view that women shouldn’t be allowed to vote was successfully challenged. ITN makes it easy for you to compare the perspectives of the pro-establishment mainstream media with those of smaller establishment-critical news outlets that you won’t find in most other news aggregators. This Magazine/Community is not affiliated with Improve The News and is an unofficial repository of the information posted there.


**LR (left/right): 1 = left leaning, 3 = neutral, 5 = right leaning** **CP (critical/pro-establishment): 1 = critical, 3 = neutral, 5 = pro**

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  • Israeli singer Eden Golan has qualified after a public vote for the Eurovision Song Contest final, which will take place Saturday, despite being booed in the semifinal on Thursday and during dress rehearsals. BBC News
  • This comes as thousands marched in Malmö, Sweden to protest Israel's participation in the competition while its campaign in Gaza continues. Further demonstrations are scheduled for Saturday. Guardian (LR: 2 CP: 5)
  • Ahead of her performance in the semifinal, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said in a video message that Golan is "competing [successfully] not just in the Eurovision" but also "in the face of an ugly wave of antisemitism." Times of Israel
  • Her song, "Hurricane," is an adaptation of an earlier version named "October Rain" that had to be modified after contest organizers considered it to be too political due to alleged allusions to the Hamas Oct. 7 attack. Al Jazeera (LR: 2 CP: 1)
  • European bookmakers have put Golan among the five entries likely to win the contest, along with Joost Klein of the Netherlands, Ireland's Bambie Thug, Baby Lasagna of Croatia, and Ukraine's duo Alyona Alyona and Jerry Heil. New York Times (LR: 2 CP: 5)
  • The popular European song contest attracted 216M viewers last year, nearly twice as many as this year's Super Bowl. According to the European Broadcasting Union (EBU), the music event is a competition between public service broadcasters, not governments. ABC News

Pro-Palestine narrative:

  • While the EBU claims that its annual song competition is apolitical, history shows that Eurovision is as political as it gets. Several countries have either been disqualified from or boycotted the contest for political reasons, including Russia, which has been banned for two years now due to its military campaign in Ukraine. Therefore, allowing Israel to compete while the country carries out brutal warfare in Gaza is nothing but a political choice.
    VOX (LR: 1 CP: 3)

Pro-Israel narrative:

  • First and foremost, there is no equivalence between Russia and Israel. If anything, Israel should be compared to Ukraine, as the wars started when both countries were attacked, not the other way round. Perhaps even more concerning is the fact that mobs in Malmö are harassing and threatening a 20-year-old woman who has nothing to do with the conflict in Gaza just because she happens to be an Israeli national and a Jew.
    SPECTATOR (UK) (LR: 5 CP: 5)

Nerd narrative:

  • There is a 43% chance Croatia will win the 2024 Eurovision Song Contest, according to the Metaculus prediction community.
    METACULUS (LR: 3 CP: 3)
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