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Join Living Room Conversations, our civil dialogue partner, and America Indivisible for a nationwide conversation on April 13, Thomas Jefferson’s 276th birthday. "Reckoning with Jefferson: A Nationwide Conversation on Race, Religion, and the America We Want to Be" will be held via in-person and online video discussions. Sign up today!

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Practical, engaging webinars designed to transform how you approach current events and facilitate productive classroom discussions.

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Practical, engaging webinars designed to transform how you approach current events and facilitate productive classroom discussions.

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Learn how to facilitate respectful dialogue across political and social divides using Mismatch, our platform for connecting students with diverse viewpoints.

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We have rated the bias of nearly 600 outlets and writers!

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See How AllSides Rates Other Media Outlets

We have rated the bias of nearly 600 outlets and writers!

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See How AllSides Rates Other Media Outlets

We have rated the bias of nearly 600 outlets and writers!

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Check out the AllSides Media Bias Chart, or go to our Media Bias Ratings page to see everything.

 

 

 

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https://www.reuters.com/lifestyle/sports/tokyo-has-shown-pandemic-can-be-beaten…

Reuters

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Individual Analyses of Bias in Reuters Articles

In addition to conducting full-scale reviews of media outlets for overall bias — using methodologies such as Blind Bias Surveys and Editorial Reviews — AllSides sometimes evaluates the bias of an individual news article for bias.

The AllSides editorial team has detected common types of media bias in some individual Reuters articles, including word choice bias, bias by placement, slant, and spin. Read our analysis of each story on the AllSides Perspectives blog:

Type of Content
Approved Story
1
Format
Region
News Item Format
Standard

Before the Olympics began, Japan had feared that the 2020 Games, with thousands of officials, media and athletes descending on Tokyo in the middle of a pandemic, might spread COVID-19, introduce new variants and overwhelm the medical system.

But as the Games draw near their end, the infection numbers from inside the Olympic "bubble" - a set of venues, hotels and the media centre to which those coming for the Games had been mostly confined - tell a different story.

Featuring more than 50,000 people, what amounted to possibly the largest global experiment of this kind since the pandemic began, appears to have largely worked, organisers and some scientists say, with only a sliver of those involved infected.

"Before the Olympics, I thought people would come to Japan with many variants and Tokyo would be a melting pot of viruses and some new variant would emerge in Tokyo," Kei Sato, a senior researcher at the University of Tokyo said.