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On this edition of Parallax Views, media scholar Robin Andersen joins us to discuss her new book The Complicit Lens: US Media Coverage of Israel’s Genocide in Gaza. In this conversation, Andersen examines how major American news outlets framed the war in Gaza following the October 7, 2023 attacks and why mainstream reporting often echoed official Israeli and U.S. government narratives while marginalizing Palestinian perspectives.
Drawing on detailed media analysis, Andersen argues that corporate media frequently downplayed the scale of Palestinian suffering, repeated unverified atrocity claims, and adopted language that framed Israeli military actions as defensive while obscuring accusations of war crimes and genocide. She also explores the role of editorial directives, narrative framing, and propaganda tropes in shaping coverage—from the portrayal of October 7 as the sole starting point of the conflict to the treatment of Palestinian journalists, aid workers, and civilian casualties.
In the course of our discussion, Andersen highlights how independent journalists, social media, and alternative outlets challenged these dominant narratives, often providing documentation and eyewitness testimony that contradicted establishment media coverage. We also examine controversies surrounding reporting by major outlets like The New York Times, the role of atrocity stories in wartime propaganda, and the broader implications for press freedom, public opinion, and democratic accountability.
Ultimately, The Complicit Lens raises urgent questions about journalism’s responsibilities during wartime: What happens when the media becomes a conduit for official narratives rather than a check on power? And what does the Gaza war reveal about the limits of U.S. media institutions in covering conflicts involving close American allies?


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