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The politico-media complex (PMC, also referred to as the political-media complex) is a name given to the network[1] of relationships between a state's political and ruling classes and its media industry. It may also encompass other interest groups, such as law (and its enforcement[2]), corporations and multinationals. The term PMC is used as a pejorative, to refer to the collusion between governments, individual politicians, and the media industry.[3][4][5][6][7][8][9]
The story of the News of the World phone-hacking scandal has revealed a web of links between senior figures within politics, the police and the media.
The "close relationship" between parts of Scotland Yard and the media has caused "serious harm", a report says.
The politico-media complex has locked itself into a cycle where politicians and journalists feed each other's negativity.
The key to understanding the Conservative revival, as it was to understanding the Blair bubble, is to know about the dynamics of the politico-media complex. Cameron wants to be written up as new and exciting. The media want to write him up as new and exciting, because that fits the template into which news reporting either fits or is made to fit.
This response has become 24-hour, seven-day-a-week amplification by the new politico-media complex, especially shrill where the dead are white people.
...French newspapers and magazine sales have skyrocketed as voters voraciously consume every detail of DSK's (Dominique Strauss-Khan) woes and digest the massive collateral damage his case has inflicted across their politico-media complex.