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PewResearch.org | News Media (23.04.2012 09:30h): How the Media Covered the 2012 Primary Campaign
Mitt Romney needed 15 weeks once the primary contests began to gain a secure hold over his partys nomination for president. But he emerged as the conclusive winner in the media narrative about the race six weeks earlier following a narrow win in his native state, Michigan. [
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PewResearch.org | News Media (12.04.2012 09:30h): 72% of Americans Follow Local News Closely
Most adults follow local news closely, and local newspapers are by far the source they rely on for much of the local information they need. [
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PewResearch.org | News Media (30.03.2012 09:30h): Blacks Views of Law Enforcement, Racial Progress and News Coverage of Race
The Trayvon Martin case has highlighted issues relating to the treatment of blacks by local police departments, the state of race relations in the U.S. and press coverage of African Americans. Pew Research Center surveys in recent years have covered the opinions of African Americans on these and other issues. [
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PewResearch.org | News Media (26.03.2012 09:30h): Two Primaries and a Gaffe Shape Campaign Coverage
Another Southern primary win helped lift Rick Santorum to his best week of coverage since mid-February while the high-profile "Etch a Sketch" gaffe by an aide had an impact on Mitt Romney's narrative. [
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PewResearch.org | News Media (19.03.2012 09:30h): State of the News Media 2012
Mobile devices are adding to peoples consumption of news, strengthening the lure of traditional news brands and providing a boost to long-form journalism, according to the Project for Excellence in Journalism's ninth annual report on the health of American journalism. [
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PewResearch.org | News Media (05.03.2012 09:30h): How Newspapers Are Faring Trying to Build Digital Revenue
The search for a new revenue model to revive the newspaper industry is making only halting progress, but some individual newspapers are faring much better than the industry overall and may provide signs of a path forward. [
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PewResearch.org | News Media (27.02.2012 09:30h): Romney's Storyline Improved, Santorum's Became More Mixed on Eve of Arizona, Michigan
The frontrunners fortunes in the media changed significantly last week as Mitt Romney rebounded from very negative coverage the previous week and Rick Santorum saw his narrative turn decidedly less positive. Meanwhile, Newt Gingrich continues to suffer from both unflattering coverage and little of it. [
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PewResearch.org | News Media (22.02.2012 09:30h): Religion in the News
The biggest religion stories of 2011 involved tensions over Islam and questions about faith in presidential politics, especially Mormonism, according to a study of news coverage by the Pew Research Centers Project for Excellence in Journalism and the Pew Research Centers Forum on Religion & Public Life. [
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PewResearch.org | News Media (13.02.2012 09:30h): Digital Advertising and News
Although revenue from digital advertising in the U.S. is expected to grow significantly in the next few years, major news organizations still face challenges in trying to harness that trend and ensure their financial futures as audiences continue to migrate online. [
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PewResearch.org | News Media (07.02.2012 09:30h): Cable Leads the Pack as Campaign News Source
Cable news is now the top regular source for campaign news. The long-term decline in the number of Americans getting campaign news from local and network TV news, and local newspapers, steepened this year. Social networking sites like Facebook and Twitter are used for campaign news by a relatively limited audience. [
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PewResearch.org | News Media (24.01.2012 09:30h): Gingrich and Romney Both Face Mixed Portrayal
As Newt Gingrich and Mitt Romney took their battle for the Republican presidential nomination to Florida for its Jan. 31 primary, both of them arrive in the state with portrayals in the news media that are almost equally mixed [
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PewResearch.org | News Media (19.01.2012 09:30h): Economy Fades as Election Intensifies
The weakening economy was the most-covered news story in 2011, but it has now been overtaken by coverage of the presidential campaign. [
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PewResearch.org | News Media (18.01.2012 09:30h): Campaign 2012 and the Media
After winning the first two nominating contests, Mitt Romney is getting more negative news coverage heading into Saturday's South Carolina primary than he has at any time so far in the GOP race, according to the first edition of an ongoing analysis of election news by the Pew Research Center's Project for Excellence in Journalism. [
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Campaign 2012 (18.01.2012 09:30h): Too Negative, Too Long, Dull
Half of Americans say the presidential campaign has been too negative and 55% of the public describe the 2012 contest so far as dull. Nearly six-in-ten 57% describe the campaign as dull. [
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News Coverage Index (04.01.2012 09:30h): The Santorum Surge Story Comes True
In the days before Iowans finally caucused, the news media were most focused on the shifting horse race that foreshadowed Rick Santorum's strong late showing, according to an analysis of the leading themes in the Iowa press narrative by the Pew Research Center's Project for Excellence in Journalism. [
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PewResearch.org | News Media (21.12.2011 09:30h): The Year in the News 2011
This year, the faltering U.S. economy was the No. 1 story in the American news media, but 2011 was also characterized by a jump of more than a third in coverage of international news. [
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PewResearch.org | News Media (14.11.2011 09:30h): How Mainstream Media Outlets Use Twitter
A new study of the practices of 13 major news organizations by the Pew Research Center's Project for Excellence in Journalism and George Washington University's School of Media and Public Affairs reveals that these news organizations use Twitter in limited ways-primarily as an added means to disseminate their own material. [
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PewResearch.org | News Media (07.11.2011 09:30h): What the Public Knows - In Words and Pictures
The Pew Research Center News IQ tests the public's knowledge of prominent people and major events in the news. The latest survey used multiple-choice items as well as photographs, maps and symbols in its 19 questions. [
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PewResearch.org | News Media (25.10.2011 09:30h): The Tablet Revolution and What it Means for the Future of News
Just 18 months after the introduction of the iPad, a new Pew Research Center study details the way in which the tablet is creating a revolution in how people get their news. About one-in-ten Americans now own a tablet, and more than half use it every day to read long articles as well as headlines. [
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PewResearch.org | News Media (17.10.2011 09:30h): The Media Primary
Rick Perry received the most favorable coverage of any candidate for president during the first five months of the race, but now Herman Cain is enjoying that distinction. Meanwhile Barack Obama has had the roughest treatment, according to a new survey which combines traditional research methods and computer algorithmic technology to code the level and tone of news coverage. [
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PewResearch.org | News Media (05.10.2011 09:30h): GOP Candidates Hardly Household Names
Smaller percentages of Americans can name, without being prompted, the leading candidates in this year's Republican presidential race than in previous GOP races. At this stage of the campaign in the 1996, 2000 and 2008 campaigns, significantly more Americans could name Bob Dole, George W. Bush, and Rudolph Giuliani than they could for Mitt Romney or Rick Perry. [
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PewResearch.org | News Media (26.09.2011 09:30h): How People Learn About Their Local Community
Contrary to much of the conventional understanding of how people learn about their communities, Americans turn to a wide range of platforms to get local news and information, and where they turn varies considerably depending and the subject matter and their age. [
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PewResearch.org | News Media (22.09.2011 09:30h): Press Widely Criticized, But Trusted More than Other Sources of Information
Negative opinions about the performance of news organizations now equal or surpass all-time highs on nine of 12 core measures the Pew Research Center for the People & the Press has been tracking since 1985. [
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Hispanic Media (29.08.2011 09:30h): Faring Better than the Mainstream Media
Spanish-language media faces challenges -- such as an increasingly U.S.-born Latino population -- but it still tends to fare better overall than their mainstream English-language counterparts. [
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PewResearch.org | News Media (28.07.2011 09:30h): Bloggers Assess Motives of the Norway Attacker
Most of the posts in the blogosphere following the dramatic July 22 attacks in Norway that resulted in at least 68 deaths focused on passing along breaking news and facts, but the next biggest topic of conversation centered around the motives and ideology of the killer, Anders Behring Breivik. [
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