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#1
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It's well-documented that if Fox News is your primary source of
current events information you are seriously misinformed. On Wed, 05 Jan 2005 04:19:15 GMT, Telamon wrote: In article O_GCd.32929$Ff3.16636@trndny04, Larry Ozarow wrote: RHF wrote: LO, It is obvious that you simply do not hear or recognize the 'slant' that NPR inparts to the news and information that is presented. . ~ RHF . In the broader sense no one can easily recognize slant as such when they hear it if it agrees with their prejudices, but NPR news programming is very careful to present both sides of issues when there is controversy. Snip Sure thing Larry. By the way, are you selling any investor swampland or maybe pre-owned cars or how about multi-level marketing. You must think most people in the news group are pretty stupid. |
#2
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![]() "David" wrote in message ... It's well-documented that if Fox News is your primary source of current events information you are seriously misinformed. Then why don't you document it? What an idiotic statement. |
#3
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Here you go...
''For each of the three misperceptions, the study found enormous differences between the viewers of Fox, who held the most misperceptions, and NPR/PBS, who held the fewest by far. Eighty percent of Fox viewers were found to hold at least one misperception, compared to 23 percent of NPR/PBS consumers. All the other media fell in between. CBS ranked right behind Fox with a 71 percent score, while CNN and NBC tied as the best-performing commercial broadcast audience at 55 percent. Forty-seven percent of print media readers held at least one misperception. As to the number of misconceptions held by their audiences, Fox far outscored all of its rivals. A whopping 45 percent of its viewers believed all three misperceptions, while the other commercial networks scored between 12 percent and 16 percent. Only nine percent of readers believed all three, while only four percent of the NPR/PBS audience did. '' http://www.alternet.org/story/16892 Gots lots more if you like... On Wed, 5 Jan 2005 13:58:14 -0600, "MnMikew" wrote: "David" wrote in message .. . It's well-documented that if Fox News is your primary source of current events information you are seriously misinformed. Then why don't you document it? What an idiotic statement. |
#4
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![]() David wrote: Here you go... ''For each of the three misperceptions, the study found enormous differences between the viewers of Fox, who held the most misperceptions, and NPR/PBS, who held the fewest by far. Eighty percent of Fox viewers were found to hold at least one misperception, compared to 23 percent of NPR/PBS consumers. All the other media fell in between. CBS ranked right behind Fox with a 71 percent score, while CNN and NBC tied as the best-performing commercial broadcast audience at 55 percent. Forty-seven percent of print media readers held at least one misperception. As to the number of misconceptions held by their audiences, Fox far outscored all of its rivals. A whopping 45 percent of its viewers believed all three misperceptions, while the other commercial networks scored between 12 percent and 16 percent. Only nine percent of readers believed all three, while only four percent of the NPR/PBS audience did. '' [idiotic story snipped!] Gots lots more if you like... No thanks! It's quite obvious to me that a 'tard such as yourself did the study. Nice try 'tard boy... PLEASE... don't try again. dxAce Michigan USA |
#5
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![]() "David" wrote in message ... Here you go... ''For each of the three misperceptions, the study found enormous differences between the viewers of Fox, who held the most misperceptions, and NPR/PBS, who held the fewest by far. Eighty percent of Fox viewers were found to hold at least one misperception, compared to 23 percent of NPR/PBS consumers. All the other media fell in between. CBS ranked right behind Fox with a 71 percent score, while CNN and NBC tied as the best-performing commercial broadcast audience at 55 percent. Forty-seven percent of print media readers held at least one misperception. As to the number of misconceptions held by their audiences, Fox far outscored all of its rivals. A whopping 45 percent of its viewers believed all three misperceptions, while the other commercial networks scored between 12 percent and 16 percent. Only nine percent of readers believed all three, while only four percent of the NPR/PBS audience did. '' http://www.alternet.org/story/16892 Gots lots more if you like... Misperceptions according to who? Again, a VERY suspect source. |
#6
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DaviD - Where Are 'your' Documents ? ~ RHF
.. |
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