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NEW CONTENT MOVED TO MIDDLEBORO REVIEW 2

Toyota

Since the Dilly, Dally, Delay & Stall Law Firms are adding their billable hours, the Toyota U.S.A. and Route 44 Toyota posts have been separated here:

Route 44 Toyota Sold Me A Lemon



Sunday, April 14, 2019

Which Candidates Are Mentioned Most Often on TV News?



FAIR

Which Candidates Are Mentioned Most Often on TV News?


view post on FAIR.org

by Jim Naureckas
Curious about how much media coverage the Democratic presidential
hopefuls were getting, I asked FAIR intern Teddy Ostrow to do a count,
using the Internet Archive’s TV News Archive, of candidate
mentions in 2019 (1/1/19–4/11/19).
He used the list of declared or exploratory candidates on Wikipedia,
plus Joe Biden, since he leads most national polls of the race.
Somewhat to my surprise, the results tracked fairly closely with
candidates’ positions in the polls. When one candidate’s mentions
are divided by the total of all candidates’
mentions, the resulting percentage generally resembles the polling
average published by Real Clear Politics (3/14/19–4/7/19):
2020 Democratic Primary Candidates Mentions
The one candidate who’s getting a much smaller percentage
of TV news mentions than his average in the polls is Biden, who got
16 percent of the mentions and is averaging 31 percent in polls.
Of course, Biden has not announced he is running, and further does
hold a current office that might keep him in the news. Bernie Sanders
also is covered somewhat less than his polling numbers: He got 18
percent of mentions, and averages 21 percent in polls.
Andrew Yang, the
least covered of the candidates who got more than a tiny amount of
coverage, got 0.5 percent of mentions with a 0.8 percent polling
average.
All the other candidates are getting a share of coverage equal to or
greater than their share of support in polls. The biggest gap was for
Elizabeth Warren, who got 16 percent of mentions and averages
only 6 percent in polls. Cory Booker, Amy Klobuchar and Kirsten
Gillibrand also got a substantially larger share of coverage
compared to their poll averages.
A couple of caveats are crucial. One is that the relationship
between how much a candidate is covered and how much polling
support they have can obviously go both ways: News managers
may or may not decide how much to cover a candidate based
on how much support they have, but voters are highly unlikely
to express support for a candidate they’ve never heard of.
Getting next to no coverage almost guarantees that a candidate
will have little or no presence in polls—as the chart bears out.
The other thing to keep in mind is that all coverage is not
the same; if coverage focuses on a candidate’s scandals,
gaffes or perceived weaknesses, they may believe less
is more. There is some research that suggests that
female candidates, in particular, are being covered more
negatively than the men (Storybench 3/29/19)
with the co-dependent relationship between corporate media and
Donald Trump—which can only be strengthened by his
running as an incumbent. With that in mind, it can only be
encouraging that all the Democratic candidates together
got more coverage—slightly—than Trump by himself,
with 23,677 vs. 19,895 mentions.
Research and charts: Teddy Ostrow



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