Wednesday's Biased Item - March 19, 2008
Read the excerpt below from Media Research Center's March 17th Media Reality Check found at MRC.org. Read "Types of Media Bias" in the right column. Then answer the questions.
1. What three types of media bias does the excerpt below highlight?
2. Should there be more stories from Iraq now that security is improving? Explain your answer.
(from the MRC.org post):
Five years ago this week, an international coalition of troops led by the U.S. invaded Iraq, overthrowing Saddam Hussein's tyrannical dictatorship in just three weeks. Since then, Iraqis have voted in free democratic elections to seat a representative parliament; Saddam and several of his henchmen have been tried and convicted in public war crimes trials; and a bloody insurgency fomented by al Qaeda in Iraq is in retreat after a surge of U.S. troops and a shift to more aggressive counter-insurgency tactics.
Analysts at the Media Research Center have studied TV news coverage of the Iraq war from the beginning, even before the first bombs fell on Baghdad in March 2003. The record shows the networks have trumpeted bad news - setbacks for the U.S. coalition and allegations of misdeeds by American troops - while minimizing good news such as the success of the 2007 troop surge and acts of heroism by U.S. soldiers.
Go to MRC.org for the original posting.