HonestReporting
HonestReporting is a non-profit media watchdog organization founded in 2000 in response to biased coverage of the Second Intifada, dedicated to monitoring and challenging anti-Israel distortions, inaccuracies, and ideological prejudices in international journalism.[1][2] Operating as a 501(c)(3) entity with headquarters in New York, it scrutinizes news articles, opinion pieces, images, and broadcasts concerning Israel, the Middle East, and Jewish communities, disseminating daily alerts through its IsraBite newsletter and social media platforms to subscribers worldwide.[3] The group's core activities include documenting media lapses, naming accountable journalists and outlets, and coordinating grassroots campaigns that have secured retractions, apologies, and policy changes, such as prompting CNN anchor Christiane Amanpour to retract an offensive remark and leading to parliamentary inquiries into potential Hamas-linked financial dealings.[4][5] A landmark achievement came in late 2023, when investigations revealed Gaza-based freelance photojournalists employed by Western agencies who glorified or anticipated the October 7 Hamas attacks, resulting in AP, CNN, and Reuters suspending their work with implicated individuals.[6][7] HonestReporting also conducts educational initiatives, including virtual webinars, media literacy resources, and missions to Israel since 2004, aiming to foster public understanding and journalistic accountability amid declining global trust in media.[3] Critics, primarily from outlets and advocates aligned with Palestinian narratives, have accused it of partisanship and endangering reporters by highlighting their alleged affiliations, though these objections have not deterred its exposés of systematically skewed sourcing in conflict reporting.[8]History
Founding and Early Years
HonestReporting was founded in October 2000 by Rabbi Shaul Rosenblatt, the CEO of Aish HaTorah UK, amid the escalation of violence during the Second Intifada, which began on September 28, 2000.[9][10] The initiative emerged from frustration with international media portrayals that Rosenblatt viewed as systematically biased against Israel, particularly in the context of ideological prejudice influencing journalistic reporting on the conflict.[9] A pivotal incident was the Associated Press photograph published on September 30, 2000, by The New York Times and other outlets, depicting Tuvia Grossman—a Jewish American student savagely beaten by a Palestinian mob in Jerusalem—misidentified in captions as a Palestinian victim of Israeli police brutality.[11] This error, corrected only after intervention by Grossman's father, highlighted for Rosenblatt the need for organized scrutiny of media accuracy and fairness in Israel-related coverage.[11] The organization launched as a modest email alert service, distributing bulletins to subscribers identifying instances of anti-Israel distortion, omission, or factual inaccuracy in global press reports, and urging recipients to contact news organizations directly for accountability.[11] Early efforts focused on high-profile cases, such as challenging The New York Times over the Grossman image, which demonstrated the potential of collective public pressure to elicit retractions and editorial responses.[11] Within months, subscriber numbers surged to tens of thousands, enabling campaigns that influenced outlets like CNN to engage in high-level discussions on coverage standards.[12] By early 2001, HonestReporting had formalized as a U.S. nonprofit under the name Middle East Media Watch, Inc., later rebranding to its current form, while maintaining its core model of rapid-response monitoring without reliance on emerging social media platforms.[10] This period marked the establishment of its grassroots methodology, prioritizing empirical verification of claims over narrative alignment, and setting the stage for broader advocacy against perceived institutional biases in journalism.[12]Expansion and Key Milestones
Following its establishment as an email alert service in 2000, HonestReporting rapidly expanded its subscriber base to tens of thousands within months, evolving from a grassroots initiative into a structured organization with dedicated teams in the United States and Israel to enable round-the-clock operations.[12] The organization reached a peak of nearly 50,000 subscribers and began providing media briefings to U.S. newsrooms, including during Ariel Sharon's 2001 election victory, positioning itself as a resource for journalists covering Israel-related events.[12] By 2003, HonestReporting established an affiliate in Canada, HonestReporting Canada, building on origins tied to U.K.-based efforts from 2000 to monitor and respond to regional media coverage.[13] In 2004, it launched educational missions to Israel, which continued annually and expanded to include virtual formats during the COVID-19 period, hosting participants from multiple countries.[3] Further international growth occurred in 2017 with the initiation of dedicated operations in France and Brazil, enhancing its capacity to address media bias in those regions.[14] On August 26, 2018, HonestReporting opened its international headquarters in downtown Jerusalem, equipped with video production facilities and increased internship capacity, attended by staff, donors, and local officials including Jerusalem Deputy Mayor Fleur Hassan-Nahoum.[15] In 2022, the organization underwent significant leadership restructuring to support broader impact, appointing Jacki Alexander as Global CEO in September, Gil Hoffman as Executive Director and Executive Editor in July, and Simon Plosker as Editorial Director; this coincided with a 534% increase in social media reach, including 78 viral posts garnering hundreds of thousands of views.[16] By 2025, marking its 25th anniversary, HonestReporting had solidified as a global media watchdog with nonprofit status in the United States (incorporated 2001), Israel, and Canada, emphasizing expanded digital advocacy and education.[12]Affiliates and International Reach
HonestReporting established its international headquarters in Jerusalem on August 26, 2018, marking a significant expansion from its initial U.S.-based operations to enhance global monitoring and advocacy efforts.[17] This move centralized international activities in downtown Jerusalem, facilitating closer coordination with on-the-ground developments in Israel while supporting outreach to worldwide media outlets.[18] The organization maintains primary offices in New York, New York, for U.S. operations and inquiries, and Jerusalem, Israel, for its core international functions, as indicated by dedicated phone lines: (888) 748-7425 for the U.S. and +972 (2) 652-9558 for Israel.[19] These locations enable HonestReporting to address media coverage across multiple languages and regions, with staff, contributors, and supporters distributed internationally to amplify its influence.[20] While primarily focused on English-language media in the United States and other English-speaking countries, HonestReporting extends its reach through monitoring of global outlets and limited affiliates specialized in foreign-language media.[21] It engages with news organizations in numerous countries, leveraging online platforms and social media—where its reach has grown exponentially since 2022—to challenge biases beyond North America and Israel.[22] Organizations bearing similar names, such as HonestReporting Canada (founded independently in 2003), operate separately without formal affiliation.[23]Mission and Organizational Structure
Core Objectives and Principles
HonestReporting's primary mission is to ensure truth, integrity, and fairness in journalism while combating ideological prejudice in media coverage, particularly as it pertains to Israel and its impacts on public discourse.[3] This objective stems from the organization's view that biased reporting undermines democratic processes by distorting facts and fostering misinformation about the Middle East and Jewish communities.[2] Core objectives include systematically monitoring global media outlets for inaccuracies, omissions, or skewed narratives in stories involving Israel, the broader Middle East, and related topics; analyzing such coverage to identify patterns of bias; and exposing these issues through detailed reports and alerts to prompt accountability.[2] The group also educates the public on evaluating news reliability via resources like webinars, news literacy materials, and guided missions to Israel, aiming to empower individuals to discern fair reporting from prejudiced content.[3] Additionally, HonestReporting facilitates grassroots advocacy by providing subscribers with tools to contact journalists and editors directly, seeking corrections or retractions where standards are breached.[2] Guiding principles emphasize a commitment to journalistic objectivity, defined by the organization as adherence to verifiable facts over ideological narratives, while holding individual reporters and outlets accountable rather than broadly condemning "mainstream media."[2] HonestReporting promotes balanced context in coverage, countering what it describes as groupthink, human errors, and underlying biases that lead to incomplete or misleading stories.[2] These principles are operationalized through daily updates, such as the IsraBite News digest, and an active social media strategy to highlight discrepancies between reported events and on-the-ground realities.[3] The organization maintains that fostering media integrity ultimately supports a well-informed citizenry essential for healthy democracies.[3]Governance, Funding, and Operations
HonestReporting functions as a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization registered in the United States with EIN 06-1611859, enabling it to receive tax-deductible contributions.[24] Its governance comprises separate structures for its U.S. and Israeli entities: the U.S. board, led by President Robert Blum, Secretary Max Blankfeld, and Treasurer David Barish, includes additional members Salo Aizenberg, Martha Barvin, Sarah Biser, Morris Mintz, and Aaron Spool.[24] In Israel, the Amuta (registered nonprofit association) is chaired by Paul Gross, with board members including Jacki Alexander and Ilene Nechamkin, alongside associates such as Bentzi Binder, Jonathan Davis, Sheara Einhorn, former Ambassador Yoram Ettinger, Jerry Glazer, Reuven Harow, Gil Hoffman, Gershon Lewis, and Simon Plosker.[24] Executive leadership includes Chief Executive Officer Jacki Alexander, appointed in September 2022 after serving in operations roles at AIPAC; Executive Director Gil Hoffman, appointed in May 2022 with prior experience as a political correspondent for The Jerusalem Post; and Editorial Director Simon Plosker.[25][26][27] These roles oversee strategic direction, with an executive committee handling key decisions as indicated in IRS Form 990 filings.[28] Funding relies predominantly on private donations from individuals and supporters, without disclosed reliance on government grants or corporate sponsorships.[29] The organization solicits contributions via its website, phone, and mail, directing U.S. checks to a New York post office box and U.K. checks to a separate address, emphasizing donor support for media accountability efforts.[30] Operations center on a global network with primary hubs in New York City (corporate office at 165 East 56th Street) and Jerusalem (international headquarters opened August 2018), supplemented by support in Canada and the U.K..[31][17] A staff of approximately 20, including directors for operations (Maya Levy-David), finance (Jerry Glazer), and special funding campaigns (Lewis Gershon), handles daily functions such as content production and donor relations; recent expansions added senior editors, social media strategists, and development directors in 2023 to enhance monitoring and outreach capabilities.[32][27] Activities emphasize rapid response to media coverage, with 2023 operations yielding 122.8 million social media impressions and over 100 corrections secured.[27]Methods and Activities
Media Monitoring Processes
HonestReporting maintains a continuous monitoring operation focused on international media coverage of Israel and related conflicts, scrutinizing print, broadcast, and digital outlets for instances of bias, factual inaccuracies, and deviations from journalistic standards such as fairness and contextual accuracy.[3] Staff analysts review articles, opinion pieces, images, and broadcasts daily, producing summaries like the "IsraBite News" roundup to highlight key developments and potential distortions.[3] This process incorporates input from subscribers who patrol local and global media, submitting alerts on suspected bias, which staff then verify through fact-checking against primary sources, including official statements and on-the-ground reporting.[33] Central to their methodology is the Falsehood Identification & Breakdown (FIB) framework, introduced in 2025, which categorizes five primary narrative distortions: delegitimizing Israel's sovereignty (e.g., denying Jewish historical ties to the land), justifying or legitimizing violence against Israel (e.g., framing terrorism as "resistance"), denying or minimizing such violence (e.g., underreporting the scale of attacks like those on October 7, 2023), deflecting blame onto Israel for adversaries' actions, and fabricating or distorting facts (e.g., uncritically adopting unverified casualty figures from groups like Hamas).[34] FIB is paired with mechanisms analyzing how bias manifests, such as through selective omission or loaded terminology, and integrates tools like the BiasBreaker AI for pattern detection and efficiency in tracking disinformation across platforms.[34] This system builds on an earlier model of eight categories of media bias, encompassing misleading terminology, imbalanced reporting, opinions disguised as news, distortion of facts, true facts leading to false conclusions, lack of transparency, and related violations, as outlined in their 2016 educational series.[35][36] For in-depth research, HonestReporting employs professional media intelligence tracking software to quantify coverage patterns, such as comparative analyses of hate crime reporting, cross-referencing with databases like FBI statistics to identify disparities in emphasis or sourcing.[37] Monitoring prioritizes high-impact outlets, including major Western broadcasters and newspapers, with a focus on real-time response to breaking events to counter narratives that could influence public opinion or policy.[1] The organization's Jerusalem-based team, supplemented by global affiliates, ensures coverage spans English-language and select international media, emphasizing empirical verification over ideological alignment in assessments.[38]Response and Advocacy Tactics
HonestReporting's response tactics center on rapid identification and public dissection of media inaccuracies or biases related to Israel. The organization conducts daily monitoring of international news outlets, scanning articles, broadcasts, and social media for distortions, omissions, or falsehoods. Upon verification, staff apply analytical frameworks like the Falsehood Identification & Breakdown (FIB), which categorizes errors into types such as fabrication, inversion, or contextual omission, supported by evidence from primary sources including footage, official records, or eyewitness accounts.[34] These analyses form the basis of published exposés on HonestReporting's website, where detailed critiques name specific journalists, editors, or outlets and demand accountability through corrections, retractions, or personnel reviews. For instance, in response to coverage perceived as whitewashing terrorist activities, the group has highlighted journalists' prior social media posts or affiliations, urging media employers to investigate potential conflicts of interest.[39] Such outputs aim to counter narratives by presenting verifiable counter-evidence, often drawn from Israeli Defense Forces statements or independent verifications, rather than unsubstantiated assertions. Advocacy extends through action alerts distributed to subscribers, typically numbering two to eight daily, which outline the issue and provide scripted messages or contact details for media personnel. Supporters are mobilized to engage outlets via emails, phone calls, or social media campaigns, applying grassroots pressure to enforce journalistic standards. This tactic has been employed in high-profile cases, such as post-October 7, 2023, efforts targeting reports on Gaza operations, where alerts encouraged demands for balanced sourcing and rejection of unverified claims from Hamas-linked entities.[40] Beyond reactive measures, HonestReporting promotes proactive advocacy via media literacy resources and training, including webinars on recognizing bias categories like misleading terminology or selective framing. These initiatives equip journalists and the public with tools to challenge ideological prejudice, emphasizing empirical scrutiny over narrative conformity, though critics from pro-Palestinian outlets have characterized such efforts as attempts to influence editorial independence.[41][42]Research and Reporting Outputs
HonestReporting generates research outputs primarily in the form of analytical articles, frameworks, and periodic reports that dissect media coverage for inaccuracies, omissions, and biases related to Israel. These publications emphasize empirical patterns in reporting, such as disproportionate sourcing from adversarial entities like Hamas or selective framing of casualties, drawing on content analysis of major outlets including CNN, BBC, The New York Times, and Reuters.[43][44] A central tool in their reporting is the Falsehood Identification & Breakdown (FIB) framework, launched on July 20, 2025, which classifies distortions into five categories: delegitimizing Israel's sovereignty, justifying or legitimizing violence against Israelis or Jews, denying such violence, deflecting blame onto Israel, and fabricating or distorting facts including atrocity propaganda. HonestReporting applies FIB to specific stories, such as debunking claims of Israeli "colonialism" or denialism around October 7, 2023, events, often integrating AI-assisted detection via their BiasBreaker tool to highlight narrative mechanisms in real-time.[34] Data-centric outputs include reviews of external and internal analyses, as in the July 23, 2025, article "Behind the Headlines," which cited a February-May 2024 Fifty Global Research Group study of 170+ articles finding 85% failed to note Hamas casualty figures from the Gaza Ministry of Health likely include terrorists, with only 3% estimating terrorist deaths and near-total reliance on unverified Hamas data across outlets like The Guardian and AP. Another referenced study by Gilboa and Sigan, covering October 2023-April 2024 New York Times articles, revealed 46% expressed empathy for Palestinians versus 10% for Israelis, with opinion pieces criticizing Israel outnumbering those on Hamas by over 3:1.[43] HonestReporting also disseminates categorical guides, such as the December 10, 2023, outline of eight media bias types—misleading terminology, imbalanced reporting, opinions as news, lack of context, selective omission, true facts out of context, visual bias, and distortion of reality—to equip readers and journalists in spotting prejudice.[45] Quarterly and annual activity reports quantify outputs, with the 2023 End-of-Year Report (January 16, 2024) detailing critiques issued, corrections obtained, and exposure of journalist affiliations with groups like Hamas, while the 2024 End-of-Year Report (June 26, 2025) tracked post-October 7, 2023, monitoring spikes. These reports serve as accountability records, often including metrics on advocacy reach and media responses.[46]Notable Campaigns and Exposés
Pre-2023 Initiatives
HonestReporting originated from a 2000 incident involving a widely circulated Associated Press photograph depicting an injured individual, later identified as Jewish American student Tuvia Grossman, being assaulted by a Palestinian mob in Jerusalem during the early stages of the Second Intifada; the image was initially captioned by The New York Times as showing a Palestinian victim, prompting the nascent group's first organized subscriber email campaign to demand corrections from media outlets.[11] This effort, launched as a small email alert list in October 2000 by co-founders including Shraga Simmons, mobilized public complaints that pressured The New York Times to issue a correction on October 5, 2000, acknowledging the misidentification and clarifying Grossman's identity as an Israeli.[11] The campaign highlighted perceived systemic errors in visual journalism during conflict reporting, establishing HonestReporting's model of grassroots advocacy through subscriber alerts to flag inaccuracies and bias in coverage of Israel.[47] By 2003, formalized as a nonprofit, HonestReporting expanded its operations to include systematic media monitoring, focusing on distortions in reporting from major outlets during the ongoing Intifada and subsequent events; this included critiques of outlets like the BBC for unbalanced portrayals of Israeli security operations.[3] A pivotal pre-2023 exposé occurred in August 2006 amid the Second Lebanon War, when HonestReporting identified digital manipulations in photographs submitted by Reuters freelancer Adnan Hajj, including a Beirut image where smoke plumes were cloned and intensified to exaggerate damage from Israeli airstrikes.[48] Reuters subsequently withdrew the altered photo, retracted 920 images by Hajj, terminated his contract, and implemented stricter photo-editing protocols, admitting the manipulations violated its standards; the incident, amplified by bloggers and HonestReporting alerts, underscored vulnerabilities in wire service verification processes during wartime.[49][50] Throughout the 2000s and 2010s, HonestReporting's initiatives emphasized rapid-response campaigns against perceived anti-Israel narratives, such as challenging the BBC's 2009 documentary Gaza: What Really Happened? for selective editing that minimized Hamas rocket fire while amplifying civilian hardship claims, leading to viewer complaints and internal BBC reviews.[1] These efforts also extended to educational missions to Israel starting in 2004, where participants received briefings from officials and journalists to contextualize media narratives on the ground, aiming to counter remote reporting biases.[3] By aggregating subscriber actions, the organization claimed responsibility for prompting over 5,000 media corrections globally by the early 2010s, though independent verification of each instance varies; such pre-2023 activities laid the groundwork for data-driven bias analyses, prioritizing factual rebuttals over opinion.[12]Post-October 7, 2023 Efforts
Following the Hamas-led attack on Israel on October 7, 2023, which killed approximately 1,200 people and saw over 250 taken hostage, HonestReporting intensified its media monitoring, publishing over 400 critiques in 2023 alone focused on coverage of the ensuing war.[51] The organization prioritized exposés on journalists' ethical breaches and ties to militants, alongside data-driven reports quantifying imbalances in reporting.[52] A key early campaign, launched in November 2023 under the banner "Broken Borders" or "Photographers Without Borders," scrutinized how Gaza-based photojournalists affiliated with Western agencies gained unprecedented access to the attack sites hours after the incursion began.[53] This investigation highlighted individuals like Hassan Eslaiah, whose images of Hamas gunmen were distributed by the Associated Press (AP) and CNN, leading both outlets to cut ties with him amid questions over prior coordination.[52] Similar scrutiny targeted Reuters contributor Mohammed Fayq Abu Mostafa, exposed for publicly urging Gazans to breach the border on October 7 via social media, and AP freelancer Issam Adwan, identified as a Hamas operative; these revelations prompted reassignments and terminations.[52] HonestReporting's submissions influenced Reuters' Pulitzer Prize entry review process and inspired legal actions, including a lawsuit against AP alleging material support for terrorism through such affiliations.[52] The group extended its efforts to CNN's Abdel Qader Sabbah, revealing his praise for a terrorist who killed 37 Jews and other sympathetic actions, resulting in his reassignment from frontline duties.[52] In August 2025, further reporting identified a Gaza journalist who won a Pulitzer as a confirmed Hamas terrorist, critiquing Reuters' dismissal of the evidence despite Sinwar's involvement in the October 7 planning.[54] These exposés extended to agencies like Agence France-Presse (AFP), whose staff crossed into Israel with Hamas, yet later sought protections for freelancers amid ongoing risks.[55] Complementing investigative work, HonestReporting commissioned quantitative analyses of war coverage. A July 2025 report by Fifty Global Research Group examined 2024 articles on Gazan casualties from eight outlets (CNN, BBC, New York Times, Washington Post, Reuters, AP, Guardian, ABC Australia), finding 100% reliance on Hamas Ministry of Health figures without balancing Israeli data, 85% omission that these included terrorists, and 50% skepticism toward Israel's estimates versus under 2% for Hamas'.[43] A parallel review of 1,398 New York Times articles showed 46% expressing empathy for Palestinians versus 10% for Israelis, with 72 op-eds critical of Israel compared to 23 of Hamas.[43] HonestReporting also campaigned against media's unverified use of Hamas casualty data, arguing in May 2025 that it perpetuates inflated civilian tolls ignoring militant embeddings in civilian sites, as evidenced by IDF footage and a Henry Jackson Society report on systematic distortions.[56] The organization urged disclaimers in reporting and contacted outlets like Reuters and The Guardian, while linking skewed coverage to post-October 7 antisemitism spikes through correlative studies of media negativity and incident surges.[56] [57] These efforts amplified via social media, boosting impressions from 3.5 million pre-attack to 56 million in October 2023 alone.[52] Annual "Dishonest Reporter" awards continued, spotlighting patterns in outlets like the New York Times for imbalanced war narratives.[58]Impact and Achievements
Corrections and Retractions Secured
HonestReporting has secured hundreds of corrections, retractions, and apologies from international media outlets for inaccuracies in coverage of Israel and related conflicts. The organization's efforts have targeted factual errors, such as misattributing events, omitting key context, or relying on unverified sources, often prompting outlets to amend articles, issue on-air clarifications, or reassign personnel. In its 2023 annual report, HonestReporting documented over 100 significant corrections achieved that year amid heightened scrutiny following the October 7 Hamas attacks.[27] A prominent example occurred on April 20, 2023, when CNN anchor Christiane Amanpour publicly apologized on air for characterizing the stabbing deaths of Lucy Dee and her two daughters by Palestinian terrorists as a "shootout" between the victims and attackers, a framing exposed by HonestReporting as minimizing the terrorist nature of the incident.[27][59] The apology followed a campaign that garnered over 1.5 million views on social media. Similarly, The Guardian removed a map from its website falsely depicting Israeli women as unable to leave home without male guardians, after HonestReporting highlighted the claim's lack of basis in Israeli law.[27] In August 2023, HonestReporting prompted ABC News Australia to issue a formal acknowledgment of error in a headline about a Tel Aviv terror attack, where the piece failed to identify the Palestinian perpetrator or Israeli victims, violating basic journalistic standards on attribution.[60][61] That same month, IOL corrected a report misstating Tel Aviv as Israel's capital, while other outlets including BBC News, CBS News, UPI, SABC News, and The New York Times issued amendments for comparable lapses in accuracy.[60] Earlier successes include 20 major corrections in November 2017 from entities such as Google, the Oxford English Dictionary, CNN, and the BBC, addressing distortions in terminology and event descriptions related to Israel.[62][63] HonestReporting Canada, an affiliated entity, secured an on-air correction from CTV on October 18, 2022, after the network erroneously reported Israel killed 49 Palestinian civilians in an incident later clarified as targeting militants.[64] In 2016, the group obtained retractions from McClatchy newspapers and the Daily Mail's online edition for unsubstantiated claims.[65]| Outlet | Date | Correction Details |
|---|---|---|
| CNN (Christiane Amanpour) | April 20, 2023 | On-air apology for framing terrorist stabbing of Dee family as "shootout"[27] |
| ABC News Australia | August 2023 | Acknowledgment of error in terror attack headline omitting perpetrator/victim identities[60] |
| The Guardian | 2023 | Removal of misleading map on women's rights in Israel[27] |
| IOL | August 2023 | Correction identifying Tel Aviv, not Jerusalem, as Israel's capital in report[60] |
| CTV (via HonestReporting Canada) | October 18, 2022 | On-air clarification that incident involved militants, not 49 civilians[64] |