I do not understand the term "mainstream liberal media"?
Does that mean the most mainstream media of media types (newpaper, TV, radio, internet) is liberal?
Or does it mean the type of media the mainstream population prefers is liberal?
If the former, individual media types are usually split or favor conservatism
Radio - Almost completely conservative dominated.
TV - Of the 3 major news channels, one is overwhelmingly conservative (FOXnews), one is liberal (MSNBC), and one is reguarded to as neutral (CNN). Tie
Newspaper - In the 2004 election, 189 newpapers endorsed Bush , 208 endorsed Kerry. In 2000, 179 endorsed Bush, 124 endorsed Gore and 20 endorsed Nader. Tie
Internet - The websites ran by the above sources should folllow their main media type stances. Blogs can be reported by anyone with a computer and there's just as many conservatives as liberals . Tie
Since none of the individual media types are overwhelmingly liberal, it wouldn't matter which one is the mainstream one. However, you could theoreticly use the term mainstream conservative media, if you believed that radio was the most mainstream media outlet.
If the latter meaning is implied, that the type of media the mainstream population prefers, is the "mainsteam liberal media", would that not imply that the mainstream itself is liberal? First, is it not agreed that the people are pretty evenly spit between "liberal and conservative" (as evidenced by the last few elections)? Second, don't both liberal and conservatives prefer a media outlet that is inline with their views? That is why conservatives favor Fox and liberals watch MSNBC
Does that mean the most mainstream media of media types (newpaper, TV, radio, internet) is liberal?
Or does it mean the type of media the mainstream population prefers is liberal?
If the former, individual media types are usually split or favor conservatism
Radio - Almost completely conservative dominated.
TV - Of the 3 major news channels, one is overwhelmingly conservative (FOXnews), one is liberal (MSNBC), and one is reguarded to as neutral (CNN). Tie
Newspaper - In the 2004 election, 189 newpapers endorsed Bush , 208 endorsed Kerry. In 2000, 179 endorsed Bush, 124 endorsed Gore and 20 endorsed Nader. Tie
Internet - The websites ran by the above sources should folllow their main media type stances. Blogs can be reported by anyone with a computer and there's just as many conservatives as liberals . Tie
Since none of the individual media types are overwhelmingly liberal, it wouldn't matter which one is the mainstream one. However, you could theoreticly use the term mainstream conservative media, if you believed that radio was the most mainstream media outlet.
If the latter meaning is implied, that the type of media the mainstream population prefers, is the "mainsteam liberal media", would that not imply that the mainstream itself is liberal? First, is it not agreed that the people are pretty evenly spit between "liberal and conservative" (as evidenced by the last few elections)? Second, don't both liberal and conservatives prefer a media outlet that is inline with their views? That is why conservatives favor Fox and liberals watch MSNBC