Difference between revisions of "Center for Media and Democracy"

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'''The Center for Media and Democracy''' (CMD) is a non-partisan [[progressive]] watchdog group led by [[Lisa Graves]]. CMD manages this website, SourceWatch.org.  As noted on SourceWatch's sister site, [https://www.prwatch.org/cmd/index.html PRWatch.org], CMD "strengthens participatory democracy by investigating and exposing [[public relations]] spin and [[propaganda]] such as corporate [[greenwashing]], and by promoting [[media]] literacy and [[citizen journalism]].CMD also manages the [http://www.BanksterUSA.org BanksterUSA] website. CMD was founded in 1993 by [[John Stauber]].  
+
'''The Center for Media and Democracy''' (CMD) is a nationally recognized watchdog founded in 1993 by [[John Stauber]] that leads in-depth investigations into the corruption that undermines our democracy, environment, and economic prosperity.<ref>CMD, [https://www.exposedbycmd.org/about-cmd/ About], ''CMD'', 2022.</ref> CMD manages this website, SourceWatch.org, and ALECExposed.org. CMD publishes original research and featured documents it obtains on its blog [https://www.exposedbycmd.org ExposedbyCMD.org].
  
== Books ==
+
In March 2018, Arn Pearson became CMD’s Executive Director, succeeding Lisa Graves, who served as executive director from 2009-2018 and currently serves as board President. CMD’s team includes researchers, data experts, FOIA experts, lawyers, and fact-checkers.
The following books were written for CMD:
+
 
* ''[https://www.prwatch.org/books/tsigfy.html Toxic Sludge is Good For You!]''
+
CMD is a 501(c)(3) tax-exempt non-profit.
* ''[https://www.prwatch.org/books/madcow.html Mad Cow U.S.A.]''
+
 
*''[https://www.prwatch.org/books/experts.html Trust Us, We're Experts! How Industry Manipulates Science and Gambles With Your Future]''
+
__TOC__
*''[https://www.prwatch.org/books/wmd.html Weapons of Mass Deception: The Uses  of Propaganda in Bush's War on Iraq]''
 
* ''[http://www.bananarepublicans.org Banana Republicans: How the Right Wing Is Turning America Into a One-Party State]''
 
*''[https://www.prwatch.org/books/tbwe The Best War Ever: Lies, Damned Lies and the Mess in Iraq]''
 
  
== People ==
+
==News and Controversies==
Current:
+
==Non-Partisan Advocacy==
* [[Arn Pearson]], Executive Director
 
* [[David Armiak]], Research Director
 
* [https://www.prwatch.org/users/990/patricia-barden Patricia Barden], IT Director
 
* [https://www.prwatch.org/user/1968 Sari Williams], Office and Outreach Manager
 
  
Past:
+
The group presents itself as a nonpartisan media research organization and its principals have criticized people and policies in both of the major political parties in the U.S. and interest groups across the political spectrum.  
* [[John Stauber]], Founder in 1993, former Executive Director, retired July, 2009.
 
* as well as several other consultants or volunteers
 
  
===Board of Directors===
+
=== Example of CMD's Critiques ===
* [[Lisa Graves]], Board President
 
* [[Deborah Bey]]
 
* [[Ellen Braune]]
 
* [[Cosmo Harrigan]]
 
* [[Jan Miyasaki]]
 
* [[Ted Nace]]
 
* [[Bo Yerxa]]
 
* [[Arn Pearson]], Ex-Officio Board Member
 
  
== Funding ==
+
The CMD book ''[[Banana Republicans]]'' documents that the right wing in the United States regards politics as a form of "war by other means."  The book notes that notwithstanding self-named "conservatives" have a "stated aversion to 'big government,' when in control of the federal government they did not hesitate to expand its powers in precisely those areas that are most threatening to individual freedoms, through the [[Patriot Act I|USA Patriot Act]] and other measures that authorize spying on citizens and detentions without trial. The likelihood that such inherently abusive powers will be misused has increased, moreover, as the [[conservative]] movement accuses its ideological adversaries of 'treason,' '[[terrorism]]' and 'un-Americanism,' threatening long-standing traditions of tolerance and diversity. ... In sum, the direction in which forces in the [[GOP]] are moving looks - at times absurdly, at times ominously - similar to the 'banana republics' of Latin America: nations dominated by narrow corporate elites, which use the pretext of national security to violate the rights of their citizens."
Over its history, CMD has received over $500 from the following foundations: [https://www.prwatch.org/finances.html]
 
* [[American Legacy Foundation]]
 
* [[Bydale Foundation]]
 
* [[Careth Foundation]]
 
* [[Carolyn Foundation]]
 
* [[Changing Horizons Charitable Trust]]
 
* [[CS Fund]]
 
* [[Deer Creek Foundation]]
 
* [[DJB Foundation]]
 
* [[Educational Foundation of America]]
 
* [[Florence and John Schumann Foundation]]
 
* [[Foundation for Deep Ecology]]
 
* [[Richard & Rhoda Goldman Fund]]
 
* [[Grodzins Fund]]
 
* [[HKH Foundation]]
 
* [[Homeland Foundation]]
 
* [[Jenifer Altman Foundation]]
 
* [[Jessie Smith Noyes Foundation]]
 
* [[Litowitz Foundation]]
 
* [[Ottinger Foundation]]
 
* [[Rockwood Fund]]
 
* [[Roy and Niuta Titus Foundation]]
 
* [[Sperling Foundation]]
 
* [[Stern Family Fund]]
 
* [[Town Creek Foundation]]
 
* [[Turner Foundation]]
 
* [[Winslow Foundation]]
 
  
The Center does '''not''' accept donations from for-profit corporations or grants from government agencies. [https://www.prwatch.org/finances.html]
+
The book warns that one-party domination of politics carries the danger of "incestuous amplification," a tendency for policymakers to "only listens to those who are already in lock-step agreement, reinforcing set beliefs and creating a situation ripe for miscalculation." It notes that in one-party dictatorships like Hitler's Germany or Stalin's Soviet Union, "hierarchical, command-driven social systems" were "notorious for their tendency to make disastrous decisions, in the areas of both domestic and foreign policy."  With regard to the United States, the book argues that "incestuous amplification" helps explain "how the [[Bush administration]] managed to convince itself that [[Iraq]] truly did possess awesome [[weapons of mass destruction]], that it was closely tied to [[al Qaeda]], and that the people of Iraq would greet a U.S. [[invasion of Iraq|invasion]] of their country as liberation. Much of the administration's intelligence information about Iraq actually came from the [[Iraqi National Congress]] (INC), an organization created and funded by the U.S. government at the behest of the [[George H.W. Bush administration|first Bush administration]] for the purpose of creating conditions for [[Saddam Hussein]]'s overthrow. Not surprisingly, the information from the INC and its head, [[Ahmed Chalabi]], tended to reinforce the already-existing assumptions of policymakers in the second Bush administration, even when that information contradicted other reports coming from the [[Central Intelligence Agency|U.S. Central Intelligence Agency]]."
[[Category:Real Economy Project]]
 
  
== Contact Information==
+
The book argues that incestuous amplification can also distort other areas of knowledge and policy, such as science.  It notes that Bush administration routinely subordinated science to politics, with potentially dangerous consequences. "To inform its decisions on issues including sex education, environmental health, [[global warming]], workplace safety and [[HIV/AIDS|AIDS]], the Bush administration has used a variety of political litmus tests to create scientific panels stacked heavily with members who have scant scientific credentials but strong industry ties and right-wing agendas. It had [[web scrubbing|altered]] official government websites, removing scientific information that contradicts the political views of industry groups and the conservative movement. In some cases, scientists have been ordered to remain silent by their politically appointed higher-ups."
 +
==Criticism==
 +
Some contend that CMD is not neutral.  CMD has been criticized for having an anti-corporate viewpoint by [[lobbyist]]s such as [[Berman & Co.]], a public affairs firm owned by [[Rick Berman]] specializing in creating [[front groups]] for industry clients in the tobacco, food, biotechnology and other sectors. [[ActivistCash.com]], an [[industry-funded organizations|industry-funded]] website run by Berman & Co. and associated with Berman's [[Center for Consumer Freedom]], has run such critiques.
  
Center for Media and Democracy<br>
+
==Funding==
520 University Ave<br>
+
CMD voluntarily discloses its major funders on its website. The following foundations and generous individuals have donated $5,000 or more to support the work of CMD since January 1, 2020:<ref name="about"/>
Ste 305<br>
 
Madison, WI 53703<br>
 
  
Email: editor@prwatch.org<br>
+
*American Federation of Teachers
Web: https://www.exposedbycmd.org
+
*Cloud Mountain Foundation
 +
*Common Counsel Foundation
 +
*Community Shares of Wisconsin
 +
*Craigslist Charitable Fund
 +
*CREDOMobile
 +
*East Bay Community Foundation
 +
*Wendy A. Fearnside
 +
*Andrew J. Goodman
 +
*Hopewell Fund
 +
*Christina Jonsson Charity
 +
*Gordon Lafer
 +
*Mindy Loiselle & Lanny Levenson Gift Fund
 +
*Madison Community Foundation
 +
*Marisla Foundation
 +
*Mazess Fund
 +
*Stewart R. Mott Foundation
 +
*Craig Newmark Philanthropic Fund
 +
*Park Foundation
 +
*Nancy D. Peterson
 +
*Piper Fund
 +
*Michael L. Schler
 +
*Sustainability Group
 +
*Sustainable Grantmaking Partners Fund
 +
*Tides Foundation
 +
*Trehan Foundation
 +
*Wallace Global Fund
 +
*Wildbasil Fund
  
== Non-Partisan Advocacy ==
+
==Personnel==
 +
===Staff===
 +
As of February 2022:<ref>CMD, [https://www.exposedbycmd.org/our-team/ Our Team], ''CMD'', accessed February 2022.</ref>
 +
*Arn Pearson, Executive Director
 +
*Eric Wittstein, Director of Operations and Development
 +
*David Armiak, Research Director
 +
*Alex Kotch, Investigative Reporter
 +
*Don Wiener, Contributor
  
The group presents itself as a nonpartisan media research organization and its principals have criticized people and policies in both of the major political parties in the U.S. and interest groups across the political spectrum.
+
'''Former Staff'''
 +
*Lisa Graves, Executive Director
 +
*Mary Bottari, Deputy Director
 +
*Patricia Barden, IT Director
 +
*Jordan Barden, Webmaster
 +
*Evan Vorpahl, Researcher
 +
*Nick Surgey, Director of Research
 +
*Jamie Corey, Researcher
 +
*Brendan Fischer, General Counsel
 +
*Jessica Mason, Researcher
 +
*Sari Williams, Office and Outreach Manager
 +
*Nikolina Lazic, Executive Assistant
 +
*Calvin Sloan, Researcher and Multimedia Specialist
 +
*Friday Thorn, Digital Editor
 +
*Jonas Persson, Writer
 +
*Rebekah Wilce, Reporter and Researcher
 +
*Harriet Rowan, Reporter
 +
*Wendell Potter, Honorary Senior Fellow
 +
*Abdul Raziq, Writer
 +
*Emily Osborne, Reporter
 +
*Sara Jerving, Reporter
 +
*Jonathan Rosenblum, Contributor
 +
*Beau Hodai, Contributor
 +
*Will Dooling, Researcher
 +
*Anne Landman, Managing Editor
 +
*Ben Tobias, Researcher
 +
*Steve Horn, Contributor
 +
*Dave Johnson, Contributor
 +
*Eric Carlson, Researcher
 +
*Jennifer Page, Researcher and Writer
 +
*Kate Rhudy, Policy Counsel
 +
*[[John Stauber]], Founder in 1993, former Executive Director, retired July 2009
  
=== Example of CMD's Critiques ===
+
===Board of Directors===
 +
As of February 2022:<ref name="about">CMD, [https://www.exposedbycmd.org/about-cmd/ About CMD], ''CMD'', accessed February 2022.</ref>
 +
*[[Lisa Graves]], President
 +
*Deborah Bey
 +
*Ellen Braune
 +
*Cosmo Harrigan
 +
*Gordon Lafer
 +
*Nancy MacLean
 +
*Jan Miyasaki
 +
*Bo Yerxa
  
The CMD book ''[[Banana Republicans]]'' documents that the right wing in the United States regards politics as a form of "war by other means."  The book notes that notwithstanding self-named "conservatives" have a "stated aversion to 'big government,' when in control of the federal government they did not hesitate to expand its powers in precisely those areas that are most threatening to individual freedoms, through the [[Patriot Act I|USA Patriot Act]] and other measures that authorize spying on citizens and detentions without trial. The likelihood that such inherently abusive powers will be misused has increased, moreover, as the [[conservative]] movement accuses its ideological adversaries of 'treason,' '[[terrorism]]' and 'un-Americanism,' threatening long-standing traditions of tolerance and diversity. ... In sum, the direction in which forces in the [[GOP]] are moving looks - at times absurdly, at times ominously - similar to the 'banana republics' of Latin America: nations dominated by narrow corporate elites, which use the pretext of national security to violate the rights of their citizens."
+
'''Former Directors'''
 +
* [[Ted Nace]]
  
The book warns that one-party domination of politics carries the danger of "incestuous amplification," a tendency for policymakers to "only listens to those who are already in lock-step agreement, reinforcing set beliefs and creating a situation ripe for miscalculation." It notes that in one-party dictatorships like Hitler's Germany or Stalin's Soviet Union, "hierarchical, command-driven social systems" were "notorious for their tendency to make disastrous decisions, in the areas of both domestic and foreign policy."  With regard to the United States, the book argues that "incestuous amplification" helps explain "how the [[Bush administration]] managed to convince itself that [[Iraq]] truly did possess awesome [[weapons of mass destruction]], that it was closely tied to [[al Qaeda]], and that the people of Iraq would greet a U.S. [[invasion of Iraq|invasion]] of their country as liberation. Much of the administration's intelligence information about Iraq actually came from the [[Iraqi National Congress]] (INC), an organization created and funded by the U.S. government at the behest of the [[George H.W. Bush administration|first Bush administration]] for the purpose of creating conditions for [[Saddam Hussein]]'s overthrow. Not surprisingly, the information from the INC and its head, [[Ahmed Chalabi]], tended to reinforce the already-existing assumptions of policymakers in the second Bush administration, even when that information contradicted other reports coming from the [[Central Intelligence Agency|U.S. Central Intelligence Agency]]."
+
==Contact Information==
 +
Center for Media and Democracy<br>
 +
520 University Ave<br>
 +
Ste 305<br>
 +
Madison, WI 53703<br>
  
The book argues that incestuous amplification can also distort other areas of knowledge and policy, such as science. It notes that Bush administration routinely subordinated science to politics, with potentially dangerous consequences. "To inform its decisions on issues including sex education, environmental health, [[global warming]], workplace safety and [[HIV/AIDS|AIDS]], the Bush administration has used a variety of political litmus tests to create scientific panels stacked heavily with members who have scant scientific credentials but strong industry ties and right-wing agendas. It had [[web scrubbing|altered]] official government websites, removing scientific information that contradicts the political views of industry groups and the conservative movement. In some cases, scientists have been ordered to remain silent by their politically appointed higher-ups."
+
Website: https://www.exposedbycmd.org<br>
 +
Email: editor@prwatch.org<br>
 +
Twitter: https://twitter.com/exposedbycmd<br>
 +
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/CenterforMediaandDemocracy/<br>
  
== Criticism ==
+
==Articles and Resources==
 +
===IRS Form 990 Filings===
 +
<div class="docframe">
 +
<p>2020</p>
 +
<p>{{#widget:Iframe|url=https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/20971359-center-for-media-and-democracy-2020-990|width=350|height=250}}</p>
 +
</div>
 +
{{Clear}}
  
Some contend that CMD is not neutral. CMD has been criticized for having an anti-corporate viewpoint by [[lobbyist]]s such as [[Berman & Co.]], a public affairs firm owned by [[Rick Berman]] specializing in creating [[front groups]] for industry clients in the tobacco, food, biotechnology and other sectors. [[ActivistCash.com]], an [[industry-funded organizations|industry-funded]] website run by Berman & Co. and associated with Berman's [[Center for Consumer Freedom]], has run such critiques.
+
==Books==
 +
* ''[https://www.prwatch.org/books/tsigfy.html Toxic Sludge is Good For You!]''
 +
* ''[https://www.prwatch.org/books/madcow.html Mad Cow U.S.A.]''
 +
*''[https://www.prwatch.org/books/experts.html Trust Us, We're Experts! How Industry Manipulates Science and Gambles With Your Future]''
 +
*''[https://www.prwatch.org/books/wmd.html Weapons of Mass Deception: The Uses  of Propaganda in Bush's War on Iraq]''
 +
* ''[http://www.bananarepublicans.org Banana Republicans: How the Right Wing Is Turning America Into a One-Party State]''
 +
*''[https://www.prwatch.org/books/tbwe The Best War Ever: Lies, Damned Lies and the Mess in Iraq]''
  
== Other organizations with similar names ==
+
===Other organizations with similar names===
  
 
CMD was founded in 1993.  Since then a number of other '''unaffiliated''' organizations with similar names have arisen. They also are named, or have in their name, "Center for Media and Democracy." These different groups include:
 
CMD was founded in 1993.  Since then a number of other '''unaffiliated''' organizations with similar names have arisen. They also are named, or have in their name, "Center for Media and Democracy." These different groups include:
Line 96: Line 144:
 
*[[DeWitt Wallace Center for Media and Democracy]] - a research center at Duke University that supports "democratic free media in the United States and around the globe" [http://www.pubpol.duke.edu/centers/dewitt/about.html]
 
*[[DeWitt Wallace Center for Media and Democracy]] - a research center at Duke University that supports "democratic free media in the United States and around the globe" [http://www.pubpol.duke.edu/centers/dewitt/about.html]
 
*[[CCTV Center for Media and Democracy]] - a Burlington, Vermont community media center (CCTV stands for Chittenden Community Television) with a mission of ensuring "free speech and opportunity in the increasingly centralized and commercialized world of electronic media" [http://www.cctv.org/index.php?SiteAlias=cctv&PageAlias=CCTV_About]
 
*[[CCTV Center for Media and Democracy]] - a Burlington, Vermont community media center (CCTV stands for Chittenden Community Television) with a mission of ensuring "free speech and opportunity in the increasingly centralized and commercialized world of electronic media" [http://www.cctv.org/index.php?SiteAlias=cctv&PageAlias=CCTV_About]
 +
 +
==References==
 +
<references/>

Revision as of 01:15, 4 February 2022

The Center for Media and Democracy (CMD) is a nationally recognized watchdog founded in 1993 by John Stauber that leads in-depth investigations into the corruption that undermines our democracy, environment, and economic prosperity.[1] CMD manages this website, SourceWatch.org, and ALECExposed.org. CMD publishes original research and featured documents it obtains on its blog ExposedbyCMD.org.

In March 2018, Arn Pearson became CMD’s Executive Director, succeeding Lisa Graves, who served as executive director from 2009-2018 and currently serves as board President. CMD’s team includes researchers, data experts, FOIA experts, lawyers, and fact-checkers.

CMD is a 501(c)(3) tax-exempt non-profit.

News and Controversies

Non-Partisan Advocacy

The group presents itself as a nonpartisan media research organization and its principals have criticized people and policies in both of the major political parties in the U.S. and interest groups across the political spectrum.

Example of CMD's Critiques

The CMD book Banana Republicans documents that the right wing in the United States regards politics as a form of "war by other means." The book notes that notwithstanding self-named "conservatives" have a "stated aversion to 'big government,' when in control of the federal government they did not hesitate to expand its powers in precisely those areas that are most threatening to individual freedoms, through the USA Patriot Act and other measures that authorize spying on citizens and detentions without trial. The likelihood that such inherently abusive powers will be misused has increased, moreover, as the conservative movement accuses its ideological adversaries of 'treason,' 'terrorism' and 'un-Americanism,' threatening long-standing traditions of tolerance and diversity. ... In sum, the direction in which forces in the GOP are moving looks - at times absurdly, at times ominously - similar to the 'banana republics' of Latin America: nations dominated by narrow corporate elites, which use the pretext of national security to violate the rights of their citizens."

The book warns that one-party domination of politics carries the danger of "incestuous amplification," a tendency for policymakers to "only listens to those who are already in lock-step agreement, reinforcing set beliefs and creating a situation ripe for miscalculation." It notes that in one-party dictatorships like Hitler's Germany or Stalin's Soviet Union, "hierarchical, command-driven social systems" were "notorious for their tendency to make disastrous decisions, in the areas of both domestic and foreign policy." With regard to the United States, the book argues that "incestuous amplification" helps explain "how the Bush administration managed to convince itself that Iraq truly did possess awesome weapons of mass destruction, that it was closely tied to al Qaeda, and that the people of Iraq would greet a U.S. invasion of their country as liberation. Much of the administration's intelligence information about Iraq actually came from the Iraqi National Congress (INC), an organization created and funded by the U.S. government at the behest of the first Bush administration for the purpose of creating conditions for Saddam Hussein's overthrow. Not surprisingly, the information from the INC and its head, Ahmed Chalabi, tended to reinforce the already-existing assumptions of policymakers in the second Bush administration, even when that information contradicted other reports coming from the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency."

The book argues that incestuous amplification can also distort other areas of knowledge and policy, such as science. It notes that Bush administration routinely subordinated science to politics, with potentially dangerous consequences. "To inform its decisions on issues including sex education, environmental health, global warming, workplace safety and AIDS, the Bush administration has used a variety of political litmus tests to create scientific panels stacked heavily with members who have scant scientific credentials but strong industry ties and right-wing agendas. It had altered official government websites, removing scientific information that contradicts the political views of industry groups and the conservative movement. In some cases, scientists have been ordered to remain silent by their politically appointed higher-ups."

Criticism

Some contend that CMD is not neutral. CMD has been criticized for having an anti-corporate viewpoint by lobbyists such as Berman & Co., a public affairs firm owned by Rick Berman specializing in creating front groups for industry clients in the tobacco, food, biotechnology and other sectors. ActivistCash.com, an industry-funded website run by Berman & Co. and associated with Berman's Center for Consumer Freedom, has run such critiques.

Funding

CMD voluntarily discloses its major funders on its website. The following foundations and generous individuals have donated $5,000 or more to support the work of CMD since January 1, 2020:[2]

  • American Federation of Teachers
  • Cloud Mountain Foundation
  • Common Counsel Foundation
  • Community Shares of Wisconsin
  • Craigslist Charitable Fund
  • CREDOMobile
  • East Bay Community Foundation
  • Wendy A. Fearnside
  • Andrew J. Goodman
  • Hopewell Fund
  • Christina Jonsson Charity
  • Gordon Lafer
  • Mindy Loiselle & Lanny Levenson Gift Fund
  • Madison Community Foundation
  • Marisla Foundation
  • Mazess Fund
  • Stewart R. Mott Foundation
  • Craig Newmark Philanthropic Fund
  • Park Foundation
  • Nancy D. Peterson
  • Piper Fund
  • Michael L. Schler
  • Sustainability Group
  • Sustainable Grantmaking Partners Fund
  • Tides Foundation
  • Trehan Foundation
  • Wallace Global Fund
  • Wildbasil Fund

Personnel

Staff

As of February 2022:[3]

  • Arn Pearson, Executive Director
  • Eric Wittstein, Director of Operations and Development
  • David Armiak, Research Director
  • Alex Kotch, Investigative Reporter
  • Don Wiener, Contributor

Former Staff

  • Lisa Graves, Executive Director
  • Mary Bottari, Deputy Director
  • Patricia Barden, IT Director
  • Jordan Barden, Webmaster
  • Evan Vorpahl, Researcher
  • Nick Surgey, Director of Research
  • Jamie Corey, Researcher
  • Brendan Fischer, General Counsel
  • Jessica Mason, Researcher
  • Sari Williams, Office and Outreach Manager
  • Nikolina Lazic, Executive Assistant
  • Calvin Sloan, Researcher and Multimedia Specialist
  • Friday Thorn, Digital Editor
  • Jonas Persson, Writer
  • Rebekah Wilce, Reporter and Researcher
  • Harriet Rowan, Reporter
  • Wendell Potter, Honorary Senior Fellow
  • Abdul Raziq, Writer
  • Emily Osborne, Reporter
  • Sara Jerving, Reporter
  • Jonathan Rosenblum, Contributor
  • Beau Hodai, Contributor
  • Will Dooling, Researcher
  • Anne Landman, Managing Editor
  • Ben Tobias, Researcher
  • Steve Horn, Contributor
  • Dave Johnson, Contributor
  • Eric Carlson, Researcher
  • Jennifer Page, Researcher and Writer
  • Kate Rhudy, Policy Counsel
  • John Stauber, Founder in 1993, former Executive Director, retired July 2009

Board of Directors

As of February 2022:[2]

  • Lisa Graves, President
  • Deborah Bey
  • Ellen Braune
  • Cosmo Harrigan
  • Gordon Lafer
  • Nancy MacLean
  • Jan Miyasaki
  • Bo Yerxa

Former Directors

Contact Information

Center for Media and Democracy
520 University Ave
Ste 305
Madison, WI 53703

Website: https://www.exposedbycmd.org
Email: editor@prwatch.org
Twitter: https://twitter.com/exposedbycmd
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/CenterforMediaandDemocracy/

Articles and Resources

IRS Form 990 Filings

2020

Books

Other organizations with similar names

CMD was founded in 1993. Since then a number of other unaffiliated organizations with similar names have arisen. They also are named, or have in their name, "Center for Media and Democracy." These different groups include:

  • CMD Pakistan - a civil society group in Pakistan, which says its goal is "to ensure free, fair and transparent holding of upcoming general elections" (in February 2008) [1]
  • Schumann Center for Media and Democracy - a foundation based in New Jersey, which focuses on the environment, good governance and media issues
  • DeWitt Wallace Center for Media and Democracy - a research center at Duke University that supports "democratic free media in the United States and around the globe" [2]
  • CCTV Center for Media and Democracy - a Burlington, Vermont community media center (CCTV stands for Chittenden Community Television) with a mission of ensuring "free speech and opportunity in the increasingly centralized and commercialized world of electronic media" [3]

References

  1. CMD, About, CMD, 2022.
  2. Jump up to: 2.0 2.1 CMD, About CMD, CMD, accessed February 2022.
  3. CMD, Our Team, CMD, accessed February 2022.