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And as the year went on, the narrative from Iraq in some ways brightened. The drumbeat of reports about daily attacks declined in late summer and fall, and with that came a decline in the amount of coverage from Iraq overall.
This shift in coverage beginning in June, in turn, coincided with a rising sense among the American public that military efforts in Iraq were going “very” or “fairly well.”
The findings suggest, among other things, that the bigger question may be not how the press interprets events but what kinds of events get covered, especially by a press corps whose movements are severely restricted in Iraq by the threat of attack and who are most mobile when embedded with U.S. troops.
The results of the study of the content of Iraq coverage also correlate to a great extent with attitudes expressed by journalists working in Iraq themselves. In a survey released by the Project in November, most journalists said they felt that the operations of the military were thoroughly covered, but they viewed the lives of ordinary Iraqis and the sense of daily life as the most “undercovered” subject. The findings here about what topics were covered tend to confirm the assessment of the journalists on the ground.
The Project for Excellence in Journalism is a non-partisan, non-ideological research institute that studies the press. It is one of eight projects that make up the Pew Research Center in Washington, D.C., a “fact tank” funded by the Pew Charitable Trusts.
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As a daily reader of events going on in Iraq, I have to say, generally speaking, that the overall tone of journalistic balance in the reporting of those events has been reasonably good. There are those (reporters)who, for a variety of reasons, express what clearly is an “agenda”,in respects to how they present a particular story to the reader. But, in my opinion, that represents more the exception, than the rule. Taking into account that bad news indeed makes for better and probably more attentive readership, it would stand to reason that there might be a “lean” in that direction. It would be nice though, to see and read a little bit more about some of the noticeably positive things going on in Iraq - and to do so from a more humanistic point of view. I, as a reader would really like to see that. I definitely need a break.
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