In a 1958 speech to the Radio and Television News Directors Association, veteran CBS journalist Edward R. Murrow told a roomful of TV executives, “We are currently wealthy, fat, comfortable and complacent.” The anchorman, who used his position to take on powerful politicians such as former Wisconsin Sen. Joseph McCarthy and issues such as segregation, cautioned that the new medium was being used to “distract, delude, amuse and insulate” the public.

Almost 60 years later, Murrow’s warning has gone unheeded by the corporate broadcast media. On June 8, CNN unveiled “Courageous,” a new production unit and an in-house studio that would be paid by advertisers to produce and broadcast news-like “branded content.”

“This isn’t about confusing editorial with advertising,” CNN executive Dan Riess told the Wall Street Journal. But a corporation going beyond advertising on a channel and funding the network to produce PR segments made to look like news is exactly the kind of confusion Riess is referring to.

More than ever before, the American public needs reliable, impartial news outlets that report on the stories of the day honestly and objectively. And while some savvy news consumers may turn to independent, online sources for information that is free from corporate influence, the majority of Americans who work 8 to 10-hour days don’t have the time or energy to seek out these sources. A 2013 Gallup poll found that 50 percent of Americans between the ages of 18 and 29 listed television as their primary source of news. A similar survey last year from the American Press Institute, a nonprofit that conducts research on the future of journalism, reported that 95 percent of adults over the age of 60 consume TV news. When these viewers turn on their television, they should not be served with a rosy, one-sided portrayal of a multinational corporation that may have been accused of worker or environmental abuses that often go unreported. (As of this writing, inquiries to CNN regarding which corporations have paid for segments on “Courageous” have not been returned.)

During Murrow’s era, broadcasters were granted licenses with the understanding that they would operate in the public interest. For example, a 1960 report by the Federal Communications Commission, which governs the broadcast media, identified 14 program areas that licensed broadcasters should follow in order to ensure diversity programming and serve the public interest. Of the 14 targets, educational programs, public affairs, editorials from licensees, political broadcasts and news programs were highlighted as key to advancing the public interest. But in the decades since, as the news became more commoditized, broadcasters have largely discarded public service in favor of higher profits and stock prices to suit investors. The elimination of the Fairness Doctrine — a policy the Federal Communications Commission adopted in 1949 that instructed news outlets to operate in the interest of impartially informing the public — signified the end of any governmental mandate for broadcasters to work in the public interest.