|
By 1999, the figure had fallen to 37 percent. The only time the Pew survey recorded a significant shift in the media's favor was in November 2001, when 46 percent said they believed news stories were accurate. Dimock attributes the anomaly to the sense of goodwill that permeated the United States after the September 2001 terrorist attacks. The most recent poll found just 29 percent believed news reports had the facts straight. (Eight percent said they didn't know.) Similarly, only 26 percent of the respondents said the press is careful to avoid bias. The figure was 36 percent in 1985. As has been the case for years, television remains the most popular news source. The poll found 71 percent of people depend on TV for national and international news. Some 42 percent said they relied on the Internet, 33 percent turned to newspapers and 21 percent tuned into the radio. (The figures don't add to up 100 percent because some people cited more than one medium.) A decade ago, only 6 percent of the survey participants said they leaned on the Web for their national and international news while 42 percent relied on newspapers. (TV also led in 1999, at 82 percent). The poll didn't try to determine whether the people who cited the Internet as their primary news source were reading Web sites run by newspapers and broadcasters.
Television also is the leading outlet for local news, with 64 percent relying on that medium. Newspapers ranked as the second-most popular source for local news at 41 percent, trailed by radio at 18 percent and the Internet at 17 percent. In this case as well, people could name more than one source. Even as more people than ever don't believe everything in the news, Pew found that the public still seems to value the media. When asked how they would feel about a news outlet closing, 82 percent said it would be an important loss if there were no local TV news and 74 percent said it would be a major blow to lose their local newspaper. Keller suspects many people cherish the newspaper they read or TV news program that they watch. "Just as polls routinely show that people hold Congress in low esteem but tend to like their own congressman, I think the public is suspicious of the media in general but tends to trust the particular news organization they turn to for news," Keller wrote. ___ On the Net: Pew Research Center:
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
News | Sports | Business | Rural Review | Teaching & Learning | Home and Family | Tourism | Obituaries
Community |
Perspectives
|
Law & Courts |
Leisure Time
|
Spiritual Life |
Health & Fitness |
Teen Scene
Calendar
|
Letters to the Editor