Elite Hostility Toward Journalism, News Trust, and the Mediating Role of Fear for Motivating Public Support of News Media

Authors

  • Jason T. Peifer Indiana University - Bloomington
  • Alexis Haskell Klein College of Media & Communication, Temple University

Keywords:

elite cues, press hostility, news trust, freedom of press, press advocacy, emotion

Abstract

This experiment extends the research on the relationship between elite hostility toward the press and public support for journalism. Using a national U.S.-based sample (N = 235), the project analyzes how an online “mash-up” video of hostile rhetoric and behavior attributed to multiple politicians elicited emotions of anger and fear as conditioned upon news trust. Analyses also examined the extent to which these threat-based emotions, in turn, promoted increased intentions to support the press. Results confirm that exposure to elite hostility toward the press can indirectly prompt intentions to support the press, showcasing fear as the operative negative emotion for propelling support for the press. Furthermore, this study’s modeling of elite hostility’s indirect effect on press support is shown to be strongest among those with relatively high in trust in their preferred news sources. The study findings have implications for maintaining and building public support for journalism in the contemporary media landscape.

Author Biographies

Jason T. Peifer, Indiana University - Bloomington

Jason T. Peifer (Ph.D., The Ohio State University) is an Associate Professor of Journalism in the Media School, Indiana University. Correspondence to: Jason T. Peifer, The Media School, Indiana University, Franklin Hall, 601 E. Kirkwood Avenue, Bloomington, IN 47405. Email: jpeifer@iu.edu.

Alexis Haskell, Klein College of Media & Communication, Temple University

Alexis Haskell (M.A., Indiana University) is a Ph.D. student in the Klein College of Media & Communication, Temple University.

Downloads

Additional Files

Published

2023-10-14

Issue

Section

Articles