Wednesday, September 06, 2006

Malice & The Media

A reader alerted me to PublicMemory, a site dedicated to charting how often a name, an entity, and/or an issue is mentioned in newspapers and on TV news shows.

Ahem.

The data for the Oil and Housing issue graph below come from a sample of U.S. local newspaper and TV news websites. PublicMemoryTM searches these sources three times a day. The graph tracks all mentions of certain key phrases. The more exposure an issue receives, the more it will be likely to affect the public memory.



The data for the Election 2006 Political Party graph below come from a sample of U.S. local newspaper and TV news websites, balanced by state and focusing on contentious congressional districts. PublicMemoryTM searches these sources three times a day, for the names of Senate, House, and Gubernatorial candidates in races that political experts consider bell weather indicators of political party advantage in 2006. The graph tracks all mentions of candidate names by political party. The more exposure a candidate receives, the more he/she will be likely to affect the public memory.


You've known this skewed news coverage crap was real for a very long time, haven't you?

Now there's proof.


Best bar bet in the world: Delilah didn't do it.
Judges 16:19--

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home