Since the election of Richard Nixon in 1968 to Donald Trump’s victory in 2016, both presidential campaigns and television news have undergone significant changes, perhaps most noticeably in the use of public opinion polls in campaign reporting by the national evening newscasts of ABC, CBS, and NBC. The Influence of Polls on Television News Coverage of Presidential Campaigns explores how during the past 50 years the three networks have quadrupled their use of polls during general election campaigns while the amount of time spent covering the actual issues facing the nation has dwindled. The increasing focus on polls over the years by television news has resulted in an overall diminished quality of journalism which is relying more and more on sensationalism and theatrics. The competition between the candidates has become a central focus of reporting, which has led to presidential campaigns being covered like sporting events. Major party candidates are portrayed increasingly less like potential leaders of the free world and more like athletes who are winning or losing a ballgame. The problem is not exit polls prematurely projecting a winner several hours before voting ends, but pre-election polls which do the same thing weeks before Election Day. Recommended for scholars interested in communication, political science, history, and sociology.
... 125, 150–61, 183; debates, 156–57, 160–61 Gould, Jack, 25 Greeley, Horace, 7 Greenfield, Jeff, 171–74, 182, 183 Hall, Leonard, 73–74 Hamilton, Alexander, 1–2 Harding, Warren G., 3, 11 Harris, Louis, 56, 74–75, 89 Harrison, Benjamin, ...
The Nightly News Nightmare, Third Edition, examines news coverage of presidential nomination and election campaigns from 1988 to 2008.
In this volume, media specialist and well-known reporters provide a comprehensive survey of the problems and possibilities of polling by media organizations in the 1990s and beyond.
Fasten your seatbelts, folks: scholarship on elections is about to speed up thanks to this collection of great essays." --Jon Krosnick, Stanford University "The past decade has seen a renewed interest in understanding campaign effects.
Broh (1987) makes this point in his assessment of television coverage of Jesse Jackson's bid for the 1984 nomination. He argues that while Jackson received more than his fair share of positive media spin, and plenty of media coverage in ...
In this volume, experts in the media and in academe challenge the conventional approaches that most news media take in their poll-based campaign coverage.
A detailed study of presidential election news coverage and its effect on voters focuses on the news audience and the images of candidates.
Public opinion pools have become staples of contemporary political reporting, and most national news organizations have sophisticated in-house polling operations. The increased number and quality of polls conducted and reported...
Here is an important contribution to the debate about the responsibilities of the news media raging among pundits and policymakers.
Now , Stephen J. Farnsworth and S. Robert Lichter use almost twenty years ' worth of those data to provide a fascinating picture of how American television has covered the last five presidential elections . Of all the contemporary books ...