This was a question on Quora. Good Thought prompt. My answer:
There isn’t because that is not what the public wants. Everyone *says* they want unbiased news but everyone reads the drama.
If you want an unbiased view, all you need to do is get to the facts yourself. And if that is not possible, read two or three publications. Thats it. Its as simple as that.
At The Children’s Post, we have strict editorial guidelines that forbid us from using adjectives that are either positive or negative. Even sports news don’t start with “Germany Crush XYZ” or some such. And I can tell you how hard that is. To get people to constantly re evaluate their work in light of these editorial guidelines.
But what is easy is getting to the source and understanding the concepts yourself. And deciding what is news and what is not. A politician making a comment is not news. The Congress passing a legislation - that’s news. In India, the text of all laws is available for us to read. So, we go and read the actual text of the law instead of depending on anyone to interpret it for us.
Likewise, when a scientific discovery happens, we go and check what stage the research is at, and then decide to publish it only if it is at pre-production or production stage. We also check if there is a conflict of interest in the funding of the study. But readers don’t even ask for the stage of research when reading headlines!
All of this, one can most certainly do to become a consumer of unbiased news. The bias is in the mind of the readers. The news agency is just feeding it. Every journalist knows how to write unbiased news. Think about why they don’t.