I agree with all of the above.
My granddad has subscribed for years, and now has an online account that I have access to. My two main problems with CR are as such:
1. As almost everyone has said, they are biased towards anything that abides by strict energy standards. Is saving resources a good thing? Absolutely. But not to the point that it affects performance as it does today. I understand that they put dishwashers and washing machines through "rigorous" testing, but they're not seeing the long-term issues that come up with these machines. Sure, clothes may look clean, but are they actually wearing them all day afterwards to see if their skin irritates from the poorly rinsed detergent? I believe they should keep a station of each main-line of products, and have employees use them as laundromats for their own clothes. The machines would get use just as they would in a home, and issues like mold, irritation from poor rinsing, and testing of components and build-quality would be ongoing. Their ratings on energy consumption weigh too heavily on the overall score, because the '12 Whirlpool agitator model I have performs far better than the new TL LG my mom has, simply because it uses enough water for the job. CR won't tell you that though. They subtract points instead.
2. This is more of a personal peeve, but it really bothers me that they treat Kenmore as a completely independent manufacturer, and they praise them constantly for their innovation and quality. Now, everyone knows, and should know, that Sears-Kenmore has never built/produced/manufactured a single product in their brand name years. They basically contract to a company for permission to rebadge their machine with their name and logo upon it, along with renaming certain key features. Their laundry machines have primarily always been Whirlpool, as have been dishwashers. Recently, Kenmore contracted use of the LG top-loader design, and CR did an entire news article about how Kenmore "made new strides in capacity with their 5.2 cu.ft. tub, larger than any manufacturer thus far". Upon looking at this particular machine, it is an unaltered LG washer. They didn't even change certain aesthetics like they do with Whirlpool built machines, like the wash arm on their dishwashers or the Turbo Zone modification. Now, I love Kenmore, but only because it's almost like a collection of the best products from each manufacturer. They need to inform the consumer and give credit to the companies where credit is due.
I also agree that they seem to lean heavily on the side of what is "trendy", and right now the "trend" is for users to be uninformed and for machines to require as little effort and time from the user as possible. They went from appealing to people like us who crave knowledge and want a high quality, high performance machine, to appealing to the "smart phone" era, and to people who treat a washing machine the same way they would a disposable drink cup.