Public relations
(Redirected from PR term)
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Public relations | |
---|---|
Interest of | • Tim Bell • Edward Bernays |
Examples
Page name | Description |
---|---|
Acanchi | |
Avisa Partners | French-based international private intelligence company described in the Integrity Initiative Leaks |
Council for Inclusive Capitalism with the Vatican | A group of wealthy people working with the Vatican... |
Edelman | PR company |
Finsbury | PR company based in London and New York that specialises in financial services clients. |
Philanthropy | Now used regularly by PR agencies to white/green wash unsavoury activity and improve the profile of wealthy donors |
Public Affairs Manager | |
Ruder Finn | PR agency known for its close ties to Israel and its decades of work for Philip Morris. It was also the main agency used to create war propaganda during the Croatian, Bosnian wars and Kosovo wars in the 1990s. |
Strategic Communication Laboratories | A private British behavioural research and strategic communication company. Possibly more hot air than substance. |
World Television |
Related Quotations
Page | Quote | Author | Date |
---|---|---|---|
Burson Cohn & Wolfe | “It is critically important that third-party genetic experts, including respected authorities with no specific background in radiofrequency, be identified to speak on the following issues:
• Problems with the Lai-Singh and Sarkar studies [on an increase in single-strand DNA breaks in the brain cells of rats after a single two-hour exposure to 2.45 GHz microwaves, at power levels officially considered safe] • The health implications of DNA single-strand breaks. We do not believe that Motorola should put anyone on camera. We must limit our corporate visibility and defer complex scientific issues to credible, qualified scientific experts. We have developed a list of independent experts in this field and are in the process of recruiting individuals willing and able to reassure the public on these matters.” | Motorola | 1994 |
COVID-19/Panic | “People in the UK widely believed that the pseudopandemic was real, not because the scientific or statistical evidence was clear but because the government spent billions with PR firms to run “hard-hitting” media campaigns designed to convince them of it.” | Iain Davis | 16 August 2022 |
Robert Malone | “Many years ago, when I was working for the "Aereas Global Tuberculosis Vaccine Foundation", which was one of the early Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation nonprofit vaccine companies, the CEO hired a media consulting firm that mainly consisted of a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and a marketing manager. To ensure that favorable stories about the organization and its mission were printed, the "journalist" and the marketing specialist would consult with their clients and learn what story the organization wanted to be told in a major print publication. An article pushing the story would then be crafted, all of the necessary background assembled to meet whatever editorial review standards were likely to be encountered. Then this prebaked work would be fed to some "journalists" working for the targeted publication. My first "You're not in Kansas anymore" moment concerning modern journalism was when I saw this process used to "place" an article in The Economist, which I had naïvely believed operated as an independent arbiter of truth. Even then, I thought, - well, this can't be the norm, can it?” | Robert Malone | 2022 |
Related Document
Title | Type | Publication date | Author(s) | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
File:Propaganda.pdf | book | 1928 | Edward Bernays | A seminal work on the systematic manipulation of public opinion. |
Many thanks to our Patrons who cover ~2/3 of our hosting bill. Please join them if you can.