Media portrayal of Iraq - Pew Research Center poll...
More than twice as many American think the media are portraying too bleak a picture of the situation in Iraq as believe the media are painting the situation as "better than it really is," a Pew Research Center for the People and the Press poll released last week discovered. In fact, across a series of categories of people (party affiliation and news source, for instance), while in some areas a plurality see the media as getting it about right, in all the sub-groups more see the media as portraying Iraq as worse than it than those who think the media are showing it as better than reality.
Surprisingly, even amongst those against going to war, 26 percent see coverage as overly negative compared to 22 percent who think it's too upbeat. Pew's Web page summarized its findings: "The latest Pew Research Center national survey, conducted Oct. 15-19 among 1,515 adults, finds that nearly four-in-ten Americans (38%) believe the news media is painting too bleak a picture of the situation in Iraq, while 36% say media reports are fairly accurate and 14% say news organizations are showing the situation there to be better than it really is."
Specifically, to the question, "News reports are making the situation in Iraq seem...better/worse than it really is," the results:
-- Overall: Worse: 38 percent About right: 36 percent Better: 14 percent Don't know: 12 percent
By sub group, with the percent for worse compared to better and then the "about right" percent:
-- Party affiliation: Republican: 55 to 7, 30 about right Democrat: 28 to 16, 45 about right Independent 34 to 19, 34 about right
-- News source: Newspaper: 36 to 12, 41 about right Radio: 42 to 12, 32 about right Network news: 36 to 12, 40 about right CNN: 32 to 18, 41 about right FNC: 55 to 10, 28 about right
-- View of war: War was right decision: 45 to 11, 35 about right Wrong decision: 26 to 22, 39 about right
For the complete poll results: people-press.org
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