
The bias rating, demonstrated on the Media Bias Chart ®️ on the horizontal axis, ranges from most extreme left to middle to most extreme right. We add each of these scores to the chart on a weighted scale, with the average of those creating the content’s overall bias score. To determine sample content’s bias score, we consider its language, its political position, and how it compares to other reporting or analysis from other sources on the same topic. We add each of these scores to the chart on a weighted scale, with the average of those creating the sample content’s overall reliability score.

To determine its reliability score, we consider the content’s veracity, expression, its title/headline, and graphics. The team considers a variety of factors when rating content. Each panel of analysts comprises one left-leaning, one right-leaning, and one center-leaning analyst. Panels of analysts from Ad Fontes Media regularly review representative sample content to rate it for reliability and bias. The following are The Week’s overall bias and reliability scores according to our Ad Fontes Media ratings methodology. The website records 8 million visits each month. Its tagline is “All you need to know about everything that matters.” The weekly publication is based in New York City and owned in the U.S. The Week is a news magazine published in the United Kingdom since 1985 and in the United States since 2001. Click Here! OverviewĪd Fontes Media rates The Week in the Skews Left category of bias and as Generally Reliable/Analysis OR Other Issues in terms of reliability.

#The week magazine conservative free#
Compare The Week’s scores to other sources on our free Interactive Media Bias Chart.
