The Intercept

The Intercept
Screenshot
Type of site
News website
Available in
  • English
  • Portuguese
URLtheintercept.com Edit this at Wikidata
CommercialNo
LaunchedFebruary 10, 2014; 10 years ago (2014-02-10)
Photograph by Trevor Paglen of the National Security Agency headquarters in Fort Meade first published in The Intercept

The Intercept is an American left-wing[1][2][3] nonprofit news organization that publishes articles and podcasts online.

The Intercept has published in English since its founding in 2014, and in Portuguese since the 2016 launch of the Brazilian edition staffed by a local team of Brazilian journalists.

  1. ^ Shaikh, Sonia Jawaid; Moran, Rachel E. (June 3, 2022). "Recognize the bias? News media partisanship shapes the coverage of facial recognition technology in the United States". New Media & Society. 26 (5). Sage: 2829–2850. doi:10.1177/14614448221090916. Retrieved September 16, 2024.
  2. ^ Perloff, Richard M. (July 27, 2021). "Introduction to Political Communication". The Dynamics of Political Communication: Media and Politics in a Digital Age (3rd ed.). New York: Routledge. p. 57. doi:10.4324/9780429298851-3. ISBN 9781000414677. Retrieved September 16, 2024 – via Google Books. The advent of a host of online news platforms—Breitbart News on the right and The Intercept on the left—have cut into mainstream news's audience, with their predictable right- and left-wing takes on politics.
  3. ^ Lapper, Richard (June 3, 2021). "The outsider". Beef, Bible and bullets: Brazil in the age of Bolsonaro. Manchester University Press. p. 28. doi:10.7765/9781526154019.00005. ISBN 978-1-5261-4900-8. Retrieved September 16, 2024 – via Google Books. Three years earlier, in an angry exchange with PT congresswoman Maria de Rosário, he told her that "she was too ugly to rape", prompting Rosário to press criminal charges, and the left-wing publication The Intercept to describe Bolsonaro as "the most misogynistic, hateful elected official in the democratic world".