Page 44 - Mass Media, Mass Propoganda Examining American News in the War on Terror
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34                          Chapter 1



                20. Pew, "Public More Critical of the Press,"  2005.
                21.  PollingReport.com, "Journalism,"  http:Nwww.poIlingreport.com/media.htm (8 Oct.
               2006).
                22:  Pew Research Center, "Media Seen as Fair, But Tilting to Gore,"  15 October 2000,
              http://people-press.org/reports/display.php3?ReportID=29 (26 Sep. 2006).
                23.  Zogby  International, "US.  Public Widely Distrusts its Leaders,"  23 May 2006,
              http://www.zogby.co1nINews/ReadNews.dbm?ID=1116 Aug. 2006).
                                                      (3
                24.  Pew, "Public More Critical of the Press,"  2005.
                25.  Pew, "Public More Critical of the Press,"  2005.
                26.  Pew, "Public More Critical of the Press,"  2005.
                27.  CBSnews.com,  "Bush's  Job  Approval  Hits  New  Low,"  3 November  2005,
              http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2OO5/11/02/eveningnewslmain1005982.shtml  (3  Aug.
              2006).
                28.  Zogby International, "U.S.  Public Widely  Distrusts its Leaders," 23 May 2006,
              http://www.zogby.com/News/ReadNews.dbm?ID=1116 (3 August 2006).; Dan Balz and
              Jon Cohen, "A  Majority in Poll Favor Deadline for Iraq Pullout,"  Washington Post, Feb-
              ruary 27,2007, l(A).
                29.  Ben H. Bagdikian, "The New Media Monopoly,"  http://www.benbagdikian.com, (3
              Aug. 2005).
                30.  Pew, "Public More Critical of the Press,"  2005.
                3  1. Associated Press and TV Guide, "Katie Couric Heads to Evening News as Poll
               Shows  Viewers  Prefer  Her  in  the  Morning,"  5 April  2006, http://www.ipsos-
              na.com/news/pressrelease.cfm?id=3040 (1 5 Apr. 2007).
                32.  Tom Rosentiel, "The  End of 'Network News,"'  Washington Post, 12 September
              2004,7(B).
                33. Project  for  Excellence  in  Journalism,  "The  State  of  the  Media,"  2005,
              http://www.stateofthenewsmedia.com/2OO5/1 (3 Feb. 2006).
                34.  Annys Shin, "Newspaper  Circulation Continues to Decline,"  Washington Post, 3
              May 2005,3(E).
                35.  Pew Research Center, "News  Audiences Increasingly Politicized,"  8 June 2004,
              http://people-press.org/reports/display.php3?PageID=834 (22 Jul. 2005).
                36.  Arthur Sulzberger Jr., "The Future of the New York Times,"  Business  Week, 17
              January  2005, http://www.businessweek.com/magazindcontt/O5033916001~mz00-
               1 .htm (2 Dec. 2005).
                37.  The Chicago Tribune, "Circulation/Audience,"  2006, http://classified.tribune.com/-
              ctadvertiserwebsitdcirculation.htm (17 Dec. 2006).
                38.  Ben H. Bagdikian, The New Media Monopoly (Boston, Ma.:  Beacon, 2004), 121,
               117.
                39. Gannett, "Company Profile,"  2005, http://www.gannett.corn/rnap/gan007.htm (12
              Jun. 2005).
                40.  Knight  Ridder,  2005, http://www.knightridder.com/papers/newspapers.h  (12
              Jun. 2005).
                41.  Associated Press, "Facts and Figures,"  2005, http://www.ap.org/pages/about/about-
              .html(7 Jul. 2005).
                42.  Dearing and Rogers, Agenda Setting, 32.
                43.  Noam  Chomsky,  "Excerpts  from Manufacturing Consent,"  Chomsky Info  1992,
              http://www.chomsky.info/interviews/l992----02.htm (1 5 Dec. 2006).
                44.  Pew Research Center, "News  Audiences Increasingly Politicized,"  8 June 2004,
              http://peoplepress.org/reports/display.php3?PageI834 (2 Aug. 2005).
                45.  Pew, "News Audiences Increasingly Politicized," 2004.
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