Tag Project for Excellence in Journalism

This Just In — Paris Hilton STILL A Skank! Film At 11!

We are often told by our Media Elite that the reason we are force-fed a diet of celebrity news crap is because that’s what we want to see. But a recent study by the Pew Research Center counter-indicates that assertion.

The Pew study, which is a longitudinal look at news interest, finds that interest in “Celebrity Scandals” actually decreased from 22% in 1986 to 17% in 2006. Interest in “Personalities and Entertainment” almost doubled in the same period, but only increased from 9% to 17%.

The study concludes that overall there has been very little meaningful shift in public interest for types of news: we still love to watch footage of disasters, we are obsessed with weather, and the economy is always big news. But celebrity junk news remains at the bottom of the list of things we actually give a damn about seeing. Yet somehow, we are drowning in such urgent topics as Lindsay Lohan’s latest drunk driving incident, sissyfights between Paris Hilton and Nicole Ritchie, and the neverending saga of Brad, Jen, and Angie.

On the plus side, the last month or so of the Project for Excellence in Journalism’s News Index show that news coverage has trended away a bit from superfluous news after peaking with the Paris-in-jail story earlier this summer. Given that late summer is traditionally the slowest news period of the year, that may bode well for a little less celebrity crap for a while…at least until Lindsay Lohan OD’s and chokes to death on her own vomit.

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Where Are We Going, And Why Are We In This Handbasket?

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Former Boston Globe media columnist Mark Jurkowitz, writing for the Project for Excellence in Journalism, looks at last week’s news coverage and notes that the story of Anna Nicole Smith’s death ate up more than 20% of the “newshole” on the cable news networks for the entire week, and more than 50% of the time on Thursday and Friday (the story broke late in the afternoon on Wednesday).

Fifty percent. For two solid days. And they’re not done yet, either.

(By contrast, the Anna Nicole story only took up about 5% of the newshole at online news sites, and about 8% of network news broadcasts.)

I think the only person who should be glad about this particular statistic is Lisa Nowak.

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