Picus TV

Picus TV is a right-wing television news station seen in Deus Ex: Human Revolution.

Background
Picus TV is a part of the advertising conglomerate, The Picus Group, founded by the media mogul Sir Martin Darrow. Its celebrity news anchor is Eliza Cassan.

Story
Adam Jensen visits the Picus studio seeking Eliza Cassan, finding the building mysteriously abandoned as he arrives. It is soon revealed that a fire alarm was tripped and then silenced. Jensen seemingly locates Eliza Cassan, only to discover that he's actually found a holographic projection. The building is quickly assaulted by mercenaries, as Frank Prichard informs Jensen that the systems controlling the hologram are located in the building's basement.

The basement turns out to be a secret bunker run by Majestic-12. Here, evidence can be found on computers and in studios that the station is engaged in a propaganda campaign against Augmentation rather than simply biased journalism, with emails detailing everything from deliberately using loaded language to wholesale faking of stories using advanced digital image manipulation technology.

Making his way to his objective, Adam discovers that Eliza Cassan is actually a projection of a powerful AI designed to manipulate the media. Yelena Fedorova then attacks, intending to kill Jensen and destroy Eliza's mainframe to prevent her further damaging the conspiracy, but is ultimately unsuccessful.

Behind the scenes

 * Picus was a mythological Roman king of Latium renown for his skill in augury – interpreting the will of the gods by studying the flight of birds.
 * Another Picus, who was often conflated with the Roman King, was a minor agricultural deity whose portfolio and rituals included the fertilization of fields with the feces of animals, often bulls. The obvious joke being that Picus TV fertilizes audiences with bullshit.
 * Picus is also the name of a genus of woodpeckers, perhaps referencing the station's tendency to hammer it's message home.
 * The logo appears to be designed so that the top and bottom of the 'C' blend together easily, making it say "Pious" news, rather suitable for the station's reporting style.