StudentNewsDaily.com


The Great Media Depression

Wednesday's Biased Item - June 4, 2008


Directions

Read the excerpt below (from Dan Gainor's report posted at BusinessandMedia.org). Read "Types of Media Bias" in the right column. Then answer the questions.

Questions

1. What type of bias does the report below illustrate?

2.  Do you think this is a fair analysis of the media's reporting on the economy?  Why or why not?

Excerpt

The economy consumes the nightly newscasts. Broadcast networks report that America's finances are "like a house of cards." ABC, CBS and NBC even hyped similarities to the Great Depression more than 40 times in the first four months of 2008. But that parallel doesn't hold up, especially when analyzing the news of that era. In fact, daily coverage of the 1929 stock market crash strongly emphasized the positive side of events. The New York Times that year summed up a six-day Dow Jones loss of 30 percent as: "the market quickly regained its poise and stability." In 2008, coverage has taken the opposite tone, even though the Dow dropped just 1/100th of 1 percent in the days after the collapse of investment bank Bear Stearns. ABC found a dark cloud for every silver lining, saying: "And everywhere you look, it's bad news." On network news, that statement was accurate.

The Business & Media Institute performed a detailed analysis of two major weeks in America's stock market history - the week of the stock market crash in 1929 and the week of the Bear Stearns collapse in 2008. BMI examined daily news reports from Oct. 28 to Nov. 3, 1929, in The Wall Street Journal, New York Times and Washington Post. Those were compared to daily reports on ABC, CBS and NBC from March 13 to March 19, 2008. The difference between how the 1929 and 2008 media handled a crisis was profound - with modern journalists hyping every event and their predecessors expressing calm optimism. Among the key findings:

Recommendations

BMI has three recommendations to keep the media from making the same mistakes in future economic coverage:

Read the full report at businessandmedia.org.