TVNewser
 
Receive mediabistro.com's Daily TVNewser Feed via email


Daily Media Newsfeed Click here to receive mediabistro.com's Daily Media Newsfeed via email.

Studies, Surveys & Research

Thursday Aug 30, 2007

Who's the Most Powerful Woman in TV News?

PH2006040600730.jpgMeredith Vieira is the highest-ranking woman in television news on Forbes' 2007 "The World's 100 Most Powerful Women".

The magazine bequeaths the very top spot on the list to German Chancellor Angela Merkel. Vieira comes in at #55, with Diane Sawyer #62, Katie Couric #63, and Christiane Amanpour #74. Anne Sweeney, President of the Disney-ABC Television Group, is #77.

In an interview on Forbes.com, Forbes Senior Editor Elizabeth MacDonald says the women on the list were chosen on the basis of "their title, their sphere of influence, their career accomplishments, (and) the amount of money they have sway over", as well as "what changes they've brought, and what influence they have around the world."

Wednesday Jul 18, 2007

The "Gut" Feeling About Cable News

Variety columnist Brian Lowry writes about the cable news coverage of DHS Secretary Michael Chertoff's "gut feeling."

"The news channels unwittingly reward nebulous plots with the sort of overwhelming response normally reserved for Paris Hilton." Lowry writes. "More troubling, however, isn't so much the news media's tendency toward groupthink as nonthink -- or 'Televise now, think later...'"

Monday Apr 16, 2007

New Pew Report Shows Varying Knowledge Levels Of Media Consumers

The Pew Research Center for the People & the Press is out with a report about "What Americans Know." Here's the AP recap.

"There are substantial differences in the knowledge levels of the audiences for different news outlets. However, there is no clear connection between news formats and what audiences know," the report states. "Well-informed audiences come from cable (Daily Show/Colbert Report, O'Reilly Factor), the internet (especially major newspaper websites), broadcast TV (NewsHour with Jim Lehrer) and radio (NPR, Rush Limbaugh's program). The less informed audiences also frequent a mix of formats: broadcast television (network morning news shows, local news), cable (Fox News Channel), and the internet (online blogs where people discuss news events)."

Here's the rest...
Monday Mar 19, 2007

Top 50 Most Visible Network Reporters

harrismarch19.jpgCongratulations, ABC's Dan Harris: You're the most visible network correspondent in 2006, according to the Center for Media and Public Affairs.

NBC's David Gregory placed second. CBS's Jim Axelrod and ABC's Martha Raddatz tied for third.

In fifth and sixth places were anchors Katie Couric and Brian Williams. (Couric reported 103 stories from September to December!)

Here's the list of the top 50...

CMPA Says "Network News Diversity Matches Record High in 2006"

image2171936l.jpgIn 2006, "racial and gender diversity among reporters on the broadcast network evening newscasts matched its highest level since 1990," the Center for Media and Public Affairs finds. Here's the summary. Highlights:

> "In 2006, 15 percent of all network stories were reported by minority correspondents and 28 percent were reported by women." (In 1990, seven percent were reported by minorities and 13 percent were reported by women.)

> "For the second straight year, female correspondents saw an increase in story assignments, rising from 25 percent in 2004 to 26 percent in 2005 to 28 percent last year."

> CBS was #1 in both minority and female reporters.

(Image via Public Eye)
Tuesday Jan 02, 2007

PEJ To Study Daily Media Output

This month, the Project for Excellence in Journalism is starting "an ambitious weekly study of what stories almost three dozen media sources are reporting, what news they view as important and how reporting differs among outlets," USAT's Peter Johnson reports.

Each Tuesday, PEJ "will issue a report on its website (journalism.org.) about the media agenda -- what was covered and what wasn't." Here are the TV broadcasts they'll be monitoring:

Network TV (Monday-Friday)

-- ABC: Good Morning America, World News With Charles Gibson

-- CBS: Early Show, Evening News With Katie Couric

-- NBC: Today, Nightly News With Brian Williams

-- PBS: NewsHour With Jim Lehrer

Cable TV (Monday-Friday)

-- Daytime (1–1:30 p.m.), 1 out of 3: CNN, Fox News, MSNBC

-- CNN (prime time), 3 out of 4: Lou Dobbs Tonight, Situation Room (7 p.m.), Paula Zahn Now, Anderson Cooper 360

-- Fox News, 3 out of 4: Special Report With Brit Hume, Fox Report With Shepard Smith, O'Reilly Factor, Hannity & Colmes

-- MSNBC, 2 out of 4: Tucker Carlson (6 p.m.), Hardball With Chris Matthews (7 p.m.), Countdown With Keith Olbermann, Scarborough Country
Wednesday Nov 29, 2006

Survey Says BBC Is Popular In U.S.

What news programs do "opinion leaders" watch? The Erdos and Morgan Opinion Leaders Survey asked individuals from workers "across the public and private sector, including members of executive and congressional branches of government, and representatives from the media, science and business industries," according to Media Bulletin.

The top four programs were evening newscasts, followed by NBC's Meet the Press, BBC World News, The O'Reilly Factor, and Larry King Live. Digital Spy says the BBC is touting the results...
Tuesday Aug 08, 2006

Schieffer More Favorable Than Couric

Bob Schieffer "scores much higher" than Katie Couric in this new Gallup poll of "television news and talk personalities." Among respondents with opinions of each person, Schieffer has a 87 percent favorable and 13 percent unfavorable rating. His successor on the CBS Evening News has a 72 percent favorable and 28 percent unfavorable rating.

There's a catch, of course: Only 17 percent of respondents had no opinion or knowledge of Couric, while 41 percent had no comment on Schieffer. Couric is clearly more well-known. But in the full sample, Schieffer's unfavorable rating is just 9 percent, while Couric's is 23 percent.

There's also a 17 point net difference between Republican and Democratic opinions of Couric. CBS is well aware of all this, but the data is interesting nonetheless...

Vieira Favorable, But Relatively "Unknown"

Meredith Vieira "is unknown to many Americans," according to this new Gallup poll, "so it is difficult to measure her potential once she is in place" on the Today Show. But the respondents who do recognize her "give her a very high net positive rating." That could be good news for NBC.

As noted below, Diane Sawyer is the most favorable of all the news and talk personalities tested by Gallup. It begs the question: If she's the most well-liked, why isn't her show the most-watched?

Gallup's analysis notes that Sawyer's popularity "has not translated into dominant ratings" for Good Morning America, but "she remains a formidable competitor."

Favorable Ratings: Diane Sawyer #1

A new Gallup Panel poll measures the favorable and unfavorable ratings for America's top television news and talk personalities.

Diane Sawyer "has the highest overall net favorable," with 80 percent favorable and just 11 percent unfavorable. (Net favorable is the favorable rating minus the unfavorable rating.) Charles Gibson, Matt Lauer, Dan Rather, Bob Schieffer, and Brian Williams all have pretty high net favorables.

However, 27 percent of those polled had never heard of Gibson; 29 percent had never heard of Schieffer; and 38 percent had never heard of Williams. (Wow.) Here's a table listing re-calculated favorable and unfavorable ratings, "looking only at the responses of those who have an opinion of each television personality:"

Opinion of Television Personalities
Among Those With Opinions of Each Person

July 24-27, 2006

Favorable Unfavorable
% %
Diane Sawyer 88 12
Charles Gibson 87 13
Brian Williams 87 13
Bob Schieffer 85 15
Anderson Cooper 83 17
Meredith Vieira 81 19
Matt Lauer 81 19
Lou Dobbs 78 22
Regis Philbin 75 25
Dan Rather 73 27
Katie Couric 72 28
Barbara Walters 70 30
Larry King 66 34
Bill O'Reilly 56 44
Geraldo Rivera 37 63
Rosie O'Donnell 35 65
Star Jones Reynolds 30 70

Previously

Pew: Evening News Aud. More Polarized

Pew: Evening Newscasts Losing Younger And Older Viewers

Pew: CNN Still The "Most Trusted Name In News," But Not By Much

Pew: Who Has The Smartest Audience?

Pew: Cable Viewership Is Stagnant

Growth Of Online News Use Is Slowing; MSNBC.com, Yahoo, CNN.com Still On Top

Most FNC Viewers Believe In Liberal Bias

FNC & CNN "Most Trusted" By Americans

Aftermath: CNN Makes "Greatest Gains" In Viewership, Pew Says

Aftermath: 70% Of Americans Following Story; Most Give Press Good Marks

Pew Survey: Reporters Or Commentators?

Pew Survey: Where Do You Get Your News?

Pew Survey: "Overwhelming American Dissatisfaction" With News Media

Read more on TVNewser >

Interested in advertising on TVNewser?

Editor:
Chris Ariens

Associate Editor:
Steve Krakauer

Contributors:
Gail Shister
Alissa Krinsky
Diane Clehane

Email

Twitter

About

Syndication

Anonymous Tips


    Archives

    May 2008

    April 2008

    March 2008

    February 2008

    more...


    mb Blogs

    FishbowlNY

    FishbowlDC

    FishbowlLA

    UnBeige

    MobileContentToday

    AgencySpy

    GalleyCat

    PRNewser

    TVNewser

    Links

    mb News Feed

    Romenesko

    Lost Remote

    NewsBlues

    FTVLive

    Newslab

    TVSpy Watercooler

    TV Barn

    Broadcasting & Cable

    BCBeat

    TV Week

    Variety

    BuzzMachine

    PressThink

    Eat the Press

    Inside Cable News

    The Modern Journalist

    Categories

    09/11/06

    A Year Of Katrina

    ABC

    About

    About Us - Modules

    About Us - Subheader Module

    Al Jazeera Intl

    Awards & Accolades

    BBC

    Bird Flu

    CBS

    CNBC

    CNN

    Couric Watch

    Court Cases

    CourtTV/truTV

    Crystal Ball

    Evening News Ratings

    Exclusives That Aren't

    FNC

    Foreign Correspondence

    Fox Biz

    Fox News Radio

    Funny

    Generalities

    HDNet

    Hurricane '07

    I Watch Reliable Sources So You Don't Have To

    Iraq

    Morning Show Ratings

    MSNBC

    NAB-RTNDA 2005

    NAB-RTNDA 2006

    NAB-RTNDA 2008

    NBC

    Network Newsing

    Now & Then

    Obits

    Politics

    Questions

    Ratings

    Site Announcements

    State of the News Media 2005

    State of the News Media 2006

    State of the News Media 2007

    State of the News Media 2008

    Studies, Surveys & Research

    Supreme Court

    The Morning Show Wars

    The Olympics

    The Pope

    The Revolving Door

    The Ticker

    Top Stories

    Web Ratings

    Writing About TV Writers

    Year in Review 2005

    Year in Review 2006

    Subscribe

    Click here to receive the Daily Media News Feed by email.

    Job Listings

    Featured Listings

    News Editor, Foxnews.com
    FOX News Channel
    New York, NY

    Graphic Designer
    WPBF TV25
    Palm Beach Gardens, FL

    On-line Digital Audio Manager
    Disney ABC Television Group
    New York, NY

    Field Producer-San Francisco Bureau
    FOX News Channel
    San Francisco, CA

    Become a partner


    ADVERTISEMENT


    Advertise on the TV Blog Network


    mediabistro.com l Member Benefits l Jobs l Freelance Marketplace l Courses l Events l Forums l Content
    mediabistro Blogs: Media News l TVNewser l GalleyCat l UnBeige l FishbowlNY l FishbowlLA l FishbowlDC l mbToolbox l PRNewser l AgencySpy l MobileContentToday
    Site Map l Advertising/Sponsorships l Partners l About Us l Contact Us/Help

    JupiterOnlineMedia

    internet.comearthweb.comDevx.commediabistro.comGraphics.com

    Search:

    Jupitermedia Corporation has two divisions: Jupiterimages and JupiterOnlineMedia

    Jupitermedia Corporate Info


    Legal Notices, Licensing, Reprints, & Permissions, Privacy Policy.

    Web Hosting | Newsletters | Tech Jobs | Shopping | E-mail Offers