Since the inception of the oil
industry in the early twentieth century, Venezuela has had strong
cultural ties to the United States. President Hugo Chávez however has
sought to change this by cultivating a sense of cultural nationalism in
his country.
A careful and sober account of Venezuelan media that
focuses on the most basic and uncontroversial facts of what constitutes
the Venezuelan media today has been non-existent in mainstream U.S.
media. Such reporting
could present a more accurate picture of the actual situation of
freedom of expression in Venezuela.
Traveling from the other world,
Federico Fellini is about to pay a visit to Venezuela's Villa del Cine to honor
and support President Hugo Chavez's efforts to launch a socialist film
renaissance for South America.
March 28th 2008, by Michael Fox - Venezuelanalysis.com
The Inter- American Press Association (IAPA) holds it's biyearly meeting
in Caracas this week - the first to be held in Venezuela in many
years. But that doesn't mean that the organization hasn't been deeply
involved in Venezuela.
January 9th 2008, by Mark Weisbrot - Editor and Publisher
The Inter-American Press Association (IAPA) is not defending press freedom, but rather taking sides in a partisan struggle in a politically polarized country.
September 20th 2007, by Michael Barker - Upside Down World
For some time it has been apparent that President Hugo Chavez – the democratically elected president of Venezuela – and his government have been on the US’s ‘regime change shopping list’. It is all too obvious that in the eyes of the world’s ruling elites Chavez is promoting the ‘wrong kind’ of democracy. To remedy the democratic problem that Venezuela poses, the US’s main democracy manipulating body, the National Endowment for Democracy (NED), has been busily financing a group called Instituto Prensa Y Sociedad (IPYS).
August 20th 2007, by Mark Weisbrot - International Business Times
Most consumers of the international media will be surprised to find that the controversy over Venezuela's oldest TV station, RCTV, is still raging. We were repeatedly informed that President Hugo Chavez "shut down" the station on May 27th. But in fact the station was never "shut down."
August 8th 2007, by Chris Carlson – Venezuelanalysis.com
The president of Venezuela's RCTV, Eladio Larez, is no stranger to the CIA. His contact with the agency goes back nearly twenty years when he helped the CIA funnel money through Venezuela to the Nicaraguan opposition as they worked to topple the Sandinista government.
The refusal to renew the 20-year-old concession license of the private Venezuelan television channel RCTV set off extraordinary media hysteria worldwide. Reporters Without Borders (RSF), naturally, participated in the international disinformation campaign, publishing an extremely biased report about RCTV on June 5, 2007.
Both the New York Times and the Wall Street Journal can barely contain their displeasure over Hugo Chavez wanting Venezuela to have majority ownership of its own assets and no longer let Big (foreign) Oil investors plunder them. Those days are over.