Omnicom Group Probes Apple News Curation After Study Finds Left‑Leaning Placement Bias
- Omnicom media buyers question audience composition, reach, and inventory transparency on Apple News after MRC findings.
- Omnicom planners and brand-safety teams are assessing operational implications as editorial curation versus algorithms gains scrutiny.
- Omnicom stresses need for measurement standards and third-party verification to manage reputational risk and client alignment.
Curation Claims Put Media Buyers on Alert
Omnicom Group and other global advertising agencies are facing fresh scrutiny over platform curation after a Media Research Center study alleges Apple’s News app overwhelmingly promotes left‑leaning outlets in high‑traffic morning slots. The study examines 620 stories featured between Jan. 1 and Jan. 31, finding 440 placements from outlets AllSides classifies as left‑leaning and 180 from centrist sources, with prominent right‑leaning brands such as the New York Post and Fox News registering no placements in the sampled slots. For media buyers at Omnicom, which coordinates large cross‑platform campaigns, the claim raises immediate questions about audience composition, reach and the transparency of inventory on a major distribution channel.
Advertising planners and brand safety teams at Omnicom are assessing the operational implications as the line between editorial curation and algorithmic selection gains attention. The study’s itemised counts show heavy representation from The Washington Post (72), The Associated Press (54), NBC News (50), The Guardian (34), NPR (25) and The Wall Street Journal (54) during the month. Omnicom’s buying strategies rely on predictable audience mixes and clear provenance of placements; perceived systematic skew in a widely used news feed could require clients to adjust media plans, increase use of first‑party data, and demand more granular transparency from platforms to ensure campaigns hit intended demographic and contextual targets.
Industry executives say the episode could accelerate moves by agencies to diversify publisher partnerships and shift toward guaranteed, curated inventory where editorial controls and audience composition are explicit. Programmatic budgets may be reallocated toward channels that offer verifiable brand suitability and political neutrality metrics, and agencies could intensify negotiations with platforms for clearer disclosure of how editorial teams and algorithms influence prominent placements. For Omnicom, which manages reputational risk and client brand alignment, the controversy underscores the importance of measurement standards and third‑party verification in digital news environments.
Platform response and methodological notes
Apple rejects the premise that its app excludes conservative outlets, saying Apple News offers access to more than 3,000 publications — including the Wall Street Journal, Fox News, Bloomberg, USA Today, Washington Examiner, New York Post and local outlets — and allows users to follow or block specific sources. The company reiterates that users control personalization features.
The MRC study uses AllSides’ bias classifications; AllSides stresses its experts did not participate in the MRC analysis and had no advance knowledge of its findings. AllSides’ director Julie Mastrine says she is not surprised by the imbalance and warns that reliance on Big Tech for news may produce uneven perspectives.
