Kartemquin Films

  • Random
  • Archive
  • RSS
  • Ask me anything
banner
futurejournalismproject:

In Print World, Political Coverage is Manly Business
A new study reports that over 70% of 2012 presidential campaign coverage in leading print dailies is written by men.
Via the 4th Estate Project:

Print election coverage since April 15th, the unofficial start to the general election (Santorum dropped out on April 12th), has been brought to us mostly by male journalists. 72.1% of print articles written on the election since April 15th were written by men and just 27.9% were written by women. During the GOP Primary, the ratio was slightly more skewed toward male journalists. From January 1 – April 14, over three-quarters (76.2%) of election print articles were written by men while only 23.8% were written by women.

At Pacific Standard, Vince Beiser looks at the numbers and says that while his gut reaction is to “sniff disdainfully at the way women continue to be treated as second-class citizens in the news media,” there’s something deeper going on. He points out that women head the New York Times (Jill Abramson) and Newsweek (Tina Brown), and are among the top editors at outlets like the AP and Reuters. Then, of course, there’s Arianna Huffington. In the end, he asks, “Could it be that at least part of the numbers disparity is because there are just more men than women who want to be campaign reporters?”
At Slate, Emily Bazelon gives an answer:

At least part of it? Most definitely, along with the other usual explanations, like mentoring and subtle signals about who is good at what. Campaign coverage is travel heavy and grueling. If you’re the primary parent, which more women still are, you’re less likely to volunteer for it. I say this as someone who gave up her chance to go to both the GOP and Democratic conventions this year for Slate. I’m not the primary parent exactly: My husband and I pretty much share. But he’s an academic, so this is a crazy time of year for him. I thought to myself: Do I really have to go? Politics isn’t my main thing. And I decided, as I did in 2008, that the answer was no—and then when I realized that Slate’s coverage of the conventions will be light on women who are on the scene, I felt predictably bad about it.

Caveat: The study, with data gathered by The 4th Estate Project (methodology here) looks at 35 leading daily newspapers. It does not take into account online news organizations.
Caveat to that Caveat: Known brands such as the print publications in this study are also among Americans’ leading online sources for the news.
Image: A Closer Look: Who’s Writing Nine Newspapers’ Presidential Election Coverage by the Women’s Media Center. (Select to embiggen)

FILM: Women’s Voices: The Gender Gap
Pop-upView Separately

futurejournalismproject:

In Print World, Political Coverage is Manly Business

A new study reports that over 70% of 2012 presidential campaign coverage in leading print dailies is written by men.

Via the 4th Estate Project:

Print election coverage since April 15th, the unofficial start to the general election (Santorum dropped out on April 12th), has been brought to us mostly by male journalists. 72.1% of print articles written on the election since April 15th were written by men and just 27.9% were written by women. During the GOP Primary, the ratio was slightly more skewed toward male journalists. From January 1 – April 14, over three-quarters (76.2%) of election print articles were written by men while only 23.8% were written by women.

At Pacific Standard, Vince Beiser looks at the numbers and says that while his gut reaction is to “sniff disdainfully at the way women continue to be treated as second-class citizens in the news media,” there’s something deeper going on. He points out that women head the New York Times (Jill Abramson) and Newsweek (Tina Brown), and are among the top editors at outlets like the AP and Reuters. Then, of course, there’s Arianna Huffington. In the end, he asks, “Could it be that at least part of the numbers disparity is because there are just more men than women who want to be campaign reporters?”

At Slate, Emily Bazelon gives an answer:

At least part of it? Most definitely, along with the other usual explanations, like mentoring and subtle signals about who is good at what. Campaign coverage is travel heavy and grueling. If you’re the primary parent, which more women still are, you’re less likely to volunteer for it. I say this as someone who gave up her chance to go to both the GOP and Democratic conventions this year for Slate. I’m not the primary parent exactly: My husband and I pretty much share. But he’s an academic, so this is a crazy time of year for him. I thought to myself: Do I really have to go? Politics isn’t my main thing. And I decided, as I did in 2008, that the answer was no—and then when I realized that Slate’s coverage of the conventions will be light on women who are on the scene, I felt predictably bad about it.

Caveat: The study, with data gathered by The 4th Estate Project (methodology here) looks at 35 leading daily newspapers. It does not take into account online news organizations.

Caveat to that Caveat: Known brands such as the print publications in this study are also among Americans’ leading online sources for the news.

Image: A Closer Look: Who’s Writing Nine Newspapers’ Presidential Election Coverage by the Women’s Media Center. (Select to embiggen)

FILM: Women’s Voices: The Gender Gap

    • #Women's Voices: The Gender Gap
    • #election 2012
    • #women journalists
    • #women's voice
    • #gender disparities
  • 8 months ago > futurejournalismproject
  • 61
  • Comments
  • Permalink
  • Share
    Tweet

61 Notes/ Hide

  1. fromrusholmewithlove reblogged this from futurejournalismproject
  2. myowncatastrophe reblogged this from holybikinisbatman
  3. hieroglyphical likes this
  4. theonecalledbiz likes this
  5. zipporah likes this
  6. sandyny4804 likes this
  7. katielann reblogged this from futurejournalismproject and added:
    Hey, not cool, print world.
  8. mctumblovin likes this
  9. johnnyamichetti likes this
  10. lunaontherun likes this
  11. blue-velve likes this
  12. jcstearns reblogged this from themediafix
  13. dissidentliberal reblogged this from mediamattersforamerica and added:
    An additional possibility could be that women seem to be shouted down more often for expressing their opinions than men,...
  14. resmc likes this
  15. trotskitty reblogged this from cool-whatever
  16. politemachinegun likes this
  17. fuckyeaawkwardness likes this
  18. shiftyobserver reblogged this from futurejournalismproject
  19. applezed reblogged this from futurejournalismproject
  20. cool-whatever reblogged this from futurejournalismproject
  21. cool-whatever likes this
  22. shirpelleg likes this
  23. holdyoursadnesslikeapuppet likes this
  24. themediafix reblogged this from futurejournalismproject
  25. womeninluxury reblogged this from futurejournalismproject
  26. 17piecesofhappiness reblogged this from futurejournalismproject
  27. mediamattersforamerica reblogged this from futurejournalismproject
  28. heavy-contact likes this
  29. compati likes this
  30. that70shope likes this
  31. kartemquin reblogged this from futurejournalismproject and added:
    FILM: Women’s Voices: The Gender Gap
  32. naytile likes this
  33. kenyatta likes this
  34. becauseforoncethisisme likes this
  35. jeddophile likes this
  36. score-mike-richards likes this
  37. sweetdreamr likes this
  38. ithoughtyouweremyre-do likes this
  39. snestastic likes this
  40. ikumaikuma likes this
  41. futurejournalismproject posted this

Recent comments

Blog comments powered by Disqus
← Previous • Next →

KARTEMQUIN

FILMS

  • IN DEVELOPMENT
  • Generation Food
  • The Homestretch
  • 63 Boycott
  • Living Revolution
  • Mormon Movie
  • Unbroken Glass
  • IN PROGRESS
  • Almost There
  • American Arab
  • As Goes Janesville
  • Cooked
  • In the Game
  • On Beauty
  • The Trials of Muhammad Ali
  • 1990- PRESENT
  • A Good Man 2011
  • The Interrupters 2011
  • No Crossover: The Trial of Allen Iverson 2010
  • Prisoner of Her Past 2010
  • Sacred Transformations 2010
  • Typeface 2009
  • At the Death House Door 2008
  • In the Family 2008
  • Milking the Rhino 2008
  • Mapping Stem Cell Research: Terra Incognita 2007
  • Golub: Late Works Are the Catastrophes 2004
  • The New Americans 2004
  • Refrigerator Mothers 2002
  • Stevie 2002
  • 5 Girls 2001
  • Vietnam, Long Time Coming 1998
  • Chicago Crossings: Bridges and Boundaries 1994
  • Hoop Dreams 1994
  • Higher Goals 1992
  • Grassroots Chicago 1991
  • 1975- 1989
  • Golub 1988
  • Women's Voices: The Gender Gap 1984
  • Taylor Chain II: A Story of Collective Bargaining 1983
  • The Last Pullman Car 1983
  • Taylor Chain I: A Story in a Union Local 1980
  • The Chicago Maternity Center Story 1976
  • HSA Hospital Strike '75 1975
  • UE/Wells 1975
  • What's Happening at Local 70? 1975
  • Where's I. W. Abel? 1975
  • 1967-1974
  • Now We Live on Clifton 1974
  • Trick Bag 1974
  • Viva la Causa 1974
  • Winnie Wright, Age 11 1974
  • Sports-Action Pro-Files 1972
  • Anonymous Artists of America 1970
  • Hum 255 1970
  • Marco 1970
  • What the Fuck Are These Red Squares? 1970
  • Inquiring Nuns 1968
  • Parents 1968
  • Thumbs Down 1968
  • Home For Life 1966

About

For over 45 years, Kartemquin Films has been making documentaries that examine and critique society through the stories of real people. This tumblr stays engaged with the social issues covered in our films. Kartemquin Films

Me, Elsewhere

  • @kartemquin on Twitter
  • Facebook Profile
  • kartemquin on Vimeo
  • RSS
  • Random
  • Archive
  • Ask me anything
  • Mobile

Effector Theme by Carlo Franco.

Powered by Tumblr