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- Newsgroups: misc.activism.progressive
- Path: sparky!uunet!wupost!mont!pencil.cs.missouri.edu!rich
- From: Hank Roth <odin@world.std.com>
- Subject: TV:More myth than fact
- Message-ID: <1992Dec17.030346.13564@mont.cs.missouri.edu>
- Followup-To: alt.activism.d
- Originator: rich@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Sender: news@mont.cs.missouri.edu
- Nntp-Posting-Host: pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Organization: ?
- Date: Thu, 17 Dec 1992 03:03:46 GMT
- Approved: map@pencil.cs.missouri.edu
- Lines: 311
-
- <<< via P_news/p.news >>>
- From: hiramc@sco.COM (Hiram Clawson)
- Subject: Re: TELEVISION
- Organization: The Santa Cruz Operation, Inc.
-
- I noticed the recent mention of Television. I've heard, but not
- yet read, there is a good book on the subject by Jerry Mander:
- Four Arguments for the Elimination of Television. I recently
- finished Mander's "In The Absence Of The Sacred" which is
- certainly a thought provoking book questioning the whole
- direction of technological society.
-
- As the Food Bin marquee recently stated: "Your TV is lying to
- you", a recent survey of TV news watchers' knowledge of events
- shows a large gap in reality. Our good friend, Ron Record, says
- "Heal Your TV" instead of "Kill Your TV". I appreciate the non
- violent attitude expressed by Ron, and it appears that, to
- effectively "Heal Your TV" you are going to have to turn the
- damned thing off and open your eyes to the real world. Read a
- book once in a while, for goodness sakes ! I think it was Ben
- Franklin who said: "One who doesn't read, is no better off than
- one who can't read."
-
- We often hear the lament these days that the government is
- failing and the lack of choices at the polls is a dismal
- statement on the state of our society. However it is not
- surprising that the U.S. electorate continues to vote for idiots
- and vote the opposite of their legitimate interests. The voting
- public is consistently lied to and misled by the prime media
- outlets. I know it is hard work, but to correct the record you
- are personally going to have to take responsibility and talk back
- to the media. When you see a story in the newspaper or on TV
- News that is misleading, pick up the phone or the pen, call the
- news director, write to the editor, write to the journalist and
- demand the facts be presented properly. The TV stations' phone
- numbers are in the book. No one else is going to do this job for
- you. The future rests in your hands.
-
- --Hiram
-
- [*~ Hiram Clawson - Member, Technical Staff, The Santa Cruz Operation ~*]
- [*~ P.O. Box 1900, Santa Cruz, CA 95061 - tel. 408-427-7519 ~*]
- [*~ FAX: 408-458-0811, Electronic mail: uunet!sco!hiramc or hiramc@sco.COM ~*]
-
- Short Quiz:
-
- Which income group pays the highest percentage of their income in
- state and local taxes? [Highest income, Middle income, Lowest income]
-
- The U.S. and other industrialized countries give aid to countries
- throughout Africa, and they receive money back through debt and interest
- payments. What would you estimate the ratio of money given to money
- received to be ? [20-1, 10-1, 5-1, 1-1, 1-5, 1-10, 1-20]
-
- What proportion of the federal budget is allocated to foreign aid ?
- [% 50, % 30, % 10, % 3, < % 1]
-
- What percentage of the unemployed receive unemployment benefits from
- the government ? [% 100, % 80, % 60, % 40, % 20]
-
- Since the early 1970's, this percentage of unemployed receiving benefits has
- [increased, stayed the same, decreased].
-
- The Bush administration has [increased, maintained, decreased] the
- amount of wetlands under government protection.
-
- The Bush administration has [led, cooperated with, lagged behind]
- international efforts to cut ozone depleting gases.
-
- Following the Gulf [Golf] War, [democracy, the monarchy] has been
- restored to Kuwait.
-
- The Bush administration responded to the killing of the Jesuits in
- El Salvador by urging Congress to [cut, continue, increase] economic
- aid to the government of El Salvador until the murderers were brought
- to justice.
-
- Following China's crackdown on pro-democracy protests, the Bush
- administration urged Congress to [impose sanctions against, continue most
- favored nation trading status with] China.
-
- In 1975, which country brutally invaded East Timor, and has occupied
- it ever since ? [China, North Korea, Indonesia, Soviet Union, Vietnam]
-
- Compared to the Somoza regime, the Sandinista government of Nicaragua
- had a [better, same, worse] record of human rights violations.
-
- The United Nations has repeatedly condemned [the Palestinians, Israel]
- for occupying other people's land.
-
- People who obtain their news [mostly, seldom] from television news
- [rarely, often] understand what is going on in the world.
-
- ------
-
- from pages 16-17, EXTRA! September 1992, Vol. 5, No. 6
-
- TV NEWS: The More You Watch, The Less You Know
-
- What Do We Learn From the News ? More Myths Than Facts, Survey Suggests
-
- By Justin Lewis
-
- Pollsters sometimes try to measure news media quality by asking the
- members of the public whether they feel it is accurate and unbiased.
- One might more reliably determine the quality of news by measuring
- what people have learned from it. Since news media are often the
- public's main source of information about politics and current
- affairs, a well-informed public may be taken as a sign that the media
- are doing a good job.
-
- As part of an ongoing study on news, public knowledge and public
- opinion, the Center for the Study of Communication (U-Mass/Amherst)
- conducted a survey of 550 university students in spring 1992. We
- wanted to see what information people knew, and to explore whether
- this information reflected an ideological bias.
-
- Since TV is the most important source of news for most Americans, we
- divided our sample into "heavy," "medium" and "light" viewers of TV
- news to see whether regularly watching TV news increased awareness of
- politics and society. Our survey indicated a striking lack of
- knowledge on the part of college students. Facts that support an
- independent or critical perspective were often not known, and
- misconceptions that encourage a politically conservative or
- establishment view of the world were common.
-
- Media Themes
-
- Some questions were asked to test whether what seemed to be frequent
- media themes had affected the way people perceive the world. One
- story that has been repeatedly told by the news media recently is the
- plight of the middle class, which has supposedly become the victim of
- an economic system that gives tax breaks to the rich and handouts to
- the poor. When we asked, "Which income group pays the highest
- percentage of their income in state and local taxes?" 70 percent said
- the middle 20 percent; only 14 percent gave the correct answer, the
- poorest 20 percent (Citizens for Tax Justice News, 4/22/91).
-
- Another frequent media theme is that the U.S. goes out of its way to
- help other countries. We asked: "The U.S. and other industrialized
- countries give aid to countries throughout Africa, and they receive
- money back through debt and interest payments. What would you
- estimate the ratio of money given to money received to be?" Only 12
- percent knew that Africa pays out more than it gets back. The great
- majority assumed that the burden was on the richer countries like the
- U.S. - 45 percent actually estimated that industrialized nations give
- out 20 times more than they receive back. Foreign development aid is
- a tiny blip in the federal expenditure, yet nearly 1 in 5 of our
- college-student sample said it absorbed more of the federal budget
- than any other item, including the military.
-
- Many of the misleading assumptions made by our respondents fit into a
- pattern of conservative beliefs about economy and society. A majority
- of respondents greatly overestimated the benefits that African
- Americans had gotten from affirmative action, and there was a
- widespread assumption that government social programs are distinctly
- more generous than they actually are. Since the mid-'70s, the
- percentage of unemployed people receiving benefits has declined from a
- high of more than 70 percent to less than 40 percent (Dollars & Sense,
- 6/91). Yet more people assumed a large increase in the percentage
- enjoying benefits (44 percent) than assumed a big decrease (36
- percent). Twelve percent actually think the federal government spends
- more money on welfare than on anything else.
-
- The Bush Record
-
- One responsibility of the press is to inform the public about the
- actions of public officials. We asked questions to determine how much
- our sample knew about the record of President Bush.
-
- On Bush's environmental record, results were mixed. While 48 percent
- were aware that the Bush administration has reduced the amount of
- wetlands under government protection, more (50 percent) think he has
- maintained (19 percent) or increased (32 percent) it. Similarly,
- while 46 percent are aware that, under Bush, the U.S. has lagged
- behind other nations in cutting down on the emission of ozone
- depleting gases, more (49 percent) think the U.S. has either led the
- way or been a cooperative partner on this issue. These numbers may
- reflect the media's strenuous attempts to be "evenhanded" rather than
- accurate about Bush's record.
-
- Perhaps the most oft-repeated journalistic claim about Bush is that he
- good on foreign policy and weak on domestic policy. And yet, as we
- discovered, people not only know very little about the president's
- foreign policy, they have actually endowed him with positions that run
- directly counter to those he holds.
-
- Despite some journalists' questioning of the kid-gloves treatment
- given to the Bush administration during the Gulf [Golf] War,
- little has been done to counteract the large doses of
- misinformation handed out during the war itself.
- Fifty-five percent have been left with the impression
- that "democracy has been restored to Kuwait," when actually the
- monarchy was restored to power.
-
- Foreign Policy
-
- Our respondents revealed widespread ignorance of the nature of U.S.
- foreign policy. From Cambodia to Zaire, they assumed the U.S.
- government had condemned groups or dictators that it had actually
- supported. Respondents, like the media, tended to see U.S. allies as
- "good guys" and official enemies as "bad guys."
-
- When asked how the Bush administration responded to the killing of the
- Jesuits in El Salvador, for example, most chose answers that showed
- the administration taking a strong pro-human rights stand: "They
- threatened to cut off aid if the murderers were not immediately
- brought to justice" (38 percent) or "They urged Congress to cut aid by
- 50 percent" (32 percent). The correct answer ("They urged Congress to
- continue aid to the Salvadoran government") was picked by only 24
- percent.
-
- Our respondents used similar assumptions when asked about the Bush
- policy toward China following the crackdown on pro-democracy protests.
- Most of our respondents thought that Bush had imposed sanctions, while
- only 30 percent realized that China still enjoyed "most favored
- nation" trading status. Despite the media attention given to the
- crackdown, the fact that the administration actually vetoed
- congressional attempts to impose sanctions on China was generally
- unknown.
-
- We asked respondents, "In 1975, which country brutally invaded East
- Timor, and has occupied it ever since?" Five options were offered,
- four of which were Communist "bad guys" (China, North Korea, Vietnam
- and the Soviet Union), along with the correct answer, Indonesia, which
- is a capitalist ally of the U.S. Our respondents preferred every one
- of the "bad guy" countries over Indonesia, which came in last with
- 12.5 percent.
-
- While the "good guys" are exonerated, the worst is assumed of the "bad
- guys." Most independent experts agree that the Sandinista
- government's human rights record in Nicaragua was an improvement over
- the Somoza regime it replaced. Yet more than two-thirds of
- respondents said that the human rights situation deteriorated when the
- Sandinistas took over.
-
- Similarly, more respondents (31 percent) thought that the Palestinians
- had been repeatedly condemned by the UN for occupying other people's
- land than thought that Israel had been so condemned (27 percent). It
- is not that the media have ignored or covered up Israel's occupation,
- but they have downplayed Israel's isolation on this issue, while at
- the same time tending to portray the Palestinians as the "bad guys" in
- the conflict. Since the answer seems to call for a "bad guy," these
- trends in coverage combine to make the topsy turvy answer seem more
- reasonable.
-
- More News Is Bad News
-
- Our general argument would suggest that watching more TV news would
- decrease knowledge of facts that do not fit in with the mainstream
- ideologies and mythologies. We were not, therefore, surprised to find
- that heavy TV news viewers were often less well informed than light TV
- news viewers.
-
- As compared to medium and light viewers, heavy viewers were four times
- less likely to know that Indonesia is occupying East Timor, five times
- less likely to know that the Sandinistas' human rights record was an
- improvement over the Somozas' and two times less likely to assume that
- much more money flows from Africa to the West rather than the other
- way around.
-
- Such correlations do not, on their own, prove cause and effect -
- people who watch less TV news, for example may be much more likely to
- do other things that would make them more knowledgeable (such as heavy
- reading). Nevertheless, our research does suggest a pattern of
- ideological bias, where those facts that might lead people to critique
- establishment or conservative positions are generally downplayed or
- excluded.
-
- (C) Copyright 1992 Justin Lewis
-
- Justin Lewis is the director of the Center for the Study of
- Communication and an associate professor at the University of
- Massachusetts at Amherst. Kristen Zirkel assisted with this research.
-
- --End EXTRA! quote--
- ----------------------------------------------
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