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Screenshot/2020

About the Author

Chad Blair

Chad Blair is the politics editor for Civil Beat. You can reach him by email at cblair@civilbeat.org or follow him on Twitter at .

In July, Civil Beat columnist Denby Fawcett bemoaned the fact that the weekly Oahu publication ran a glowing cover story on Honolulu mayoral candidate Keith Amemiya.

The problem, she wrote, is that Amemiya鈥檚 campaign paid MidWeek for the good press, which ran before the primary election.

鈥淎s a journalist, this bothers me: the pay-to-play idea of selling a cover story to a political candidate during an election year in a publication many people think is a newspaper. It erodes people鈥檚 confidence in objective news gathering.鈥

That it does. Sadly, pay-to-play networks are on the rise nationwide, according to by The New York Times last month.

A screen shot from Aloha State News taken Nov. 19. Screenshot/2020

鈥淎 nationwide operation of 1,300 local sites publishes coverage that is ordered up by Republican groups and corporate P.R. firms,鈥 the story explained. The online sites are filling a void, the Times reported, as local newspapers continue to fold across the nation.

You might be relieved to know that MidWeek is not among the Hawaii publications identified. But , demonstrating that Hawaii is not immune from the pay-to-play trend.

I had never heard of any of them, even though I work in journalism. Judging by their content, however, none of them are worth my time, and probably not yours.

Five of the websites 鈥 , , , and 鈥 appear to run near identical content, and to keep the same stories up for days at a time.

On Thursday, for example, all five ran stories extolling the virtues of Acellus Learning Accelerator, a program used by elementary and secondary students in public schools in Hawaii and elsewhere.

鈥淎cellus chairman: Scrapping online learning tool $272 million,鈥 one headline announced.

As Civil Beat education reporter Suevon Lee reported Aug. 24, some local schools were already dumping Acellus for its 鈥渋nappropriate and racist content,鈥 as one principal put it. The DOE has since moved to phase out the program completely.

Lee told me that she caught wind of the websites via a Google news alert long after the Acellus story broke. She noticed that some folks in Hawaii started to post about Aloha State News on Facebook in early October.

A screen shot from Amy Perruso’s Facebook page taken Nov. 23. Screenshot/2020

The commenters include Amy Perruso, an Oahu state representative and former school teacher.

鈥淲hatever happened to integrity?鈥 she posted Oct. 2.

鈥淲tF is the Kauai Sun?鈥 replied Jonathon Medeiros.

Perruso and her Facebook friends quickly sniffed out the origins of 鈥渇aux news,鈥 as she put it 鈥 Metric Media Foundation 鈥 and how the same stories were appearing on dozens of related websites.

The Times piece said that most of the pay-to-play sites are part of Metric Media but that the ownership and financing is murky. But, as the Columbia Journalism Review , the networks can be traced back to conservative businessman Brian Timpone, something the Times confirmed.

CJR said, 鈥淭hese networks of sites can be used in a variety of ways: as 鈥榮tage setting鈥 for events, focusing attention on issues such as voter fraud and energy pricing, providing the appearance of neutrality for partisan issues, or to gather data from users that can then be used for political targeting.鈥

‘Deprived Citizens’

Other articles with a political bent running on some of the Hawaii sites last week included 鈥淗awaii, other see higher rates of small business closures from Covid regulations鈥 and 鈥淭op marginal tax rate in Hawaii could reach 60.34% under Biden plan.鈥

Translation: Joe Biden, Hawaii and Democrats are bad.

All five sites also ran the same puff piece, 鈥淎rmy is reaping the benefits of Oahu seller’s market.鈥

The five sites did not respond to my email inquiries as of Monday. But here is what Metric Media 鈥 which lists a Delaware postal address and says it is a 501(c)(3) non-profit 鈥渘ews content provider鈥 鈥 says about itself on the Hawaii websites:

鈥淢any local and state governments operate without sufficient media oversight. When citizens are deprived of basic government information, communities and civic discourse suffer.

鈥淥ur approach is to provide objective, data-driven information without political bias. We provide 100% original reporting, including to share as much data as possible from government and other publicly available sources. We also provide a platform for all citizens whose views on issues are rarely heard. If you want a voice in your community, we want to hear from you.鈥

The sixth local pay-to-play website identified by the Times is , owned by the Business Daily network. Its content appears to amount to a series of press releases, including this one from the state Department of Business, Economic Development and Tourism: 鈥淒BEDT releases report in Hawaii.鈥

鈥淚nternational students have positively contributed to Hawai鈥榠 and our economy for many years,鈥 DBEDT Director Mike McCartney said in the press release.

Brett Oppegaard Brett Oppegaard

Hawaii Business daily did not respond to my inquiry, either. But Brett Oppegaard, an associate professor and undergraduate chair of the journalism program at UH Manoa, did.

鈥淥bviously, more and more professional news organizations are disappearing, creating these news deserts across the country where there are no local journalists doing any kind of work,鈥 he said. 鈥淎nd people still want local news. Unfortunately, through social media or these sort of pseudo news sites, that hole is being filled with misinformation, product placement, advertising disguised as content.鈥

Echoing Denby Fawcett, Oppegaard pointed out that the websites do not have to adhere to a code of ethics that many journalists follow, including the Society of Professional Journalists.

What to do, then?

鈥淚t鈥檚 imperative for journalists to openly and transparently share their code of ethics, how they process information, and how they work,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he more we can teach people how ethical journalism works, the better they will be able to distinguish better between news sites.鈥


Read this next:

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About the Author

Chad Blair

Chad Blair is the politics editor for Civil Beat. You can reach him by email at cblair@civilbeat.org or follow him on Twitter at .


Latest Comments (0)

One has to ask how far journalism has deviated from it's origin of impartial presentation of the facts because just from casual observation it would appear that there is a lot of bashing of one particular political viewpoint in the media these days.聽 It would appear that to regain the trust of those who no longer believe in the mainstream media then the journalism profession needs to ask themselves why this is so.聽 As an example, millions of the Trump supporters firmly believe the mainstream media has not fairly treated the president fairly in news presentation for these past four years.聽 Fair or not, it is a valid point that many people have and a failure to address this dichotomy will only continue to polarize the viewpoints that currently exist about the press.

incredibles2 · 4 years ago

I think when it comes to politics and civics, all media outlets are biased including Civil Beat.

macprohawaii · 4 years ago

Not to worry Mr B.聽 I will continue to read your CB site.I will also comment.聽 Whether it gets posted is another matter.I, too, have never heard of these sites.聽 Although, if they start getting buzz from being reported on...its your fault.

Ranger_MC · 4 years ago

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