Consumer Demand for Cynical and Negative News Frames

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Abstract

Commentators regularly lament the proliferation of both negative and/or strategic ("horse race") coverage in political news content. The most frequent account for this trend focuses on news norms and/or the priorities of news journalists. Here, we build on recent work arguing for the importance of demand-side, rather than supply-side, explanations of news content. In short, news may be negative and/or strategy-focused because that is the kind of news that people are interested in. We use a lab study to capture participants' news-selection biases, alongside a survey capturing their stated news preferences. Politically interested participants are more likely to select negative stories. Interest is associated with a greater preference for strategic frames as well. And results suggest that behavioral results do not conform to attitudinal ones. That is, regardless of what participants say, they exhibit a preference for negative news content. © The Author(s) 2014.

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APA

Trussler, M., & Soroka, S. (2014). Consumer Demand for Cynical and Negative News Frames. International Journal of Press/Politics, 19(3), 360–379. https://doi.org/10.1177/1940161214524832

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