Not sure how you can say that either the BBC or Guardian is balanced in the vast majority of their output. Even I don't say that about The Telegraph from my perspective as a right-leaning person.
The Indie itself is certainly a left-leaning paper, and the Times is very much an 'establishment' / corporate / remainer (even now) paper, slowly slewing towards the LibDems, and I think only 'endorsed' the Tories this time around because who was in charge of Labour and that there were realistically only two options as to who formed the next government.
I remember back in the early 90s reading many newspapers at school when I was in Sixth Form - and, to be honest, reading the Telegraph, Times, Gaurdian or Independent was fine back then - for the most part, news was reported as just that - this happened, etc etc.
Opinion and commentary was either in a specific section (obviously no Interwbe back then) and what 'politically biased' commentary made it onto other pages was quite obvious as it was headlined as such and written by a specific journalist who essentially did just that. There was, in essence, a distinction between news journos/content and political content/commentary.
The same could reasonably be said for articles about (what should always be) non-contentious issues, such as reviews of cultrual events, holiday destinations, products, etc, with far less political and social commentary mixed in and especially the huge amount of shilling in today's media - whether because the ad revenue is dependent on 'friendly reviews', or the reviewer getting 'brownie points' for espousing some ideological viewpoint, or, as seems often the case with people on social media, freindly reviews in return for money/other goodies or access to 'exclusive' events (hence the new term 'access media').
Unfortunately, a lot of people have retreated into their own ideological bubbles when it comes to consuming media (I still read articles from outlets other than the DT, including some that aren't in tune with my political views). Tim Pool has mentioned this quite a bit over the last few years in his YouTube commentary videos, especially as regards those from the more left-leaning positions (he is centre-left himself so its not me espousing some alt-right conspiracy theory).
I think he essentially means those on the right of the spectrum are sceptical about left-of-centre media, but still will read/view content and make their own mind up (especially as they view other content on the issue), whereas an increasing number of people on the Left completely disregard any content from right-leaning outlets and thus get a distorted picture of the world, further reinforcing their worldview (hence why the Left is going further leftwards, whereas the Right has only moved a little in comparison [Tim has shown evidence from acadaemic studies on this]).
I'm not saying that's you in this case (although you presumably thinking the BBC has never produced any PC content is, I'm afraid, not helping), but you need to be wary of recommending something just because you agree with their political outlook. I just had a look over at The Guardian's website, and the vast majority of the content shown on its main page is obviously left-leaning. But then the same can be said about The Telegraph from a Right-wing perspective - I think in both (and TBH every other major outlet), commentary is mixed into news items or commentary itself has become news items, and feature far more prominently.
The same goes for sensationalist/clickbait/woke (even DT articles are going woke now) items on Sport, Culture (especially) and the emergency of tabloid-style fluff pieces (often by useless, vapid so-called journalists) and sychophantic, gushing shill reviews. I spend more time on the DT's Comments section discussing issues (below articles) with other readers than reading the articles themselves. The one exception is election/referendum time when all the trolls (including ones from hostile foreign governments trying to stir up trouble) come out of the woodwork and things go nuts, ending up in virtual slanging matches.
I mean, that's why I'm not advocating the Telegraph to the OP, and I myself have been trying to find an alternative to them that properly reports news etc without bias, thus making evaluating any commentary on news events, politics, A N Other subjects far easier. Perhaps a bit boring, but at least I would be able to get my head around issues without having to filter every other word in case of bias or agendas.
I think that The interweb and (un)social media era has a lot to answer for. The quality of the media has dropped several levels since the mid 90s, far more than did from what I was told was the case between the 1960s and 90s when the tabloids started to take over.
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