Whose Voices Count?: Sourcing U.S. American Television News About the World

Authors

  • David C. Oh Ramapo College of New Jersey
  • Omotayo O. Banjo University of Cincinnati
  • Nancy A. Jennings University of Cincinnati

Keywords:

sources, broadcast news, race, indexing, international news

Abstract

The current study examines the extent to which U.S. coverage of world news events relies on White and Western sources as well as the role that journalists’ race, story type, and interview type have in the selection of news sources. Furthermore, this study examines whether such sourcing biases exist across commercial and public networks, namely ABC, NBC, CBS, and PBS. Relying on a critical media effects approach, we drew connections between indexing theory and critical race and postcolonial studies to conduct a content analysis of more than 200 news stories and more than 600 sources in 2019 and 2020. The findings reveal significantly more sources from Western countries than non-Western countries in the coverage of international news stories with some variance with reporters, story type, and network type. Implications of the disproportionate presence of Western sources are further discussed. 

Author Biographies

David C. Oh, Ramapo College of New Jersey

Associate ProfessorCommunication Arts201-684-7112

Omotayo O. Banjo, University of Cincinnati

Associate ProfessorCommunication513-556-2142

Nancy A. Jennings, University of Cincinnati

ProfessorDirector of the Children's Education and Entertainment Research (CHEER) LabCommunication513-556-4456

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Published

2022-08-19

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Section

Articles