LEFT BEHIND:
The Skewed Representation of Religion in Major News Media
It would surprise few people, conservative or progressive, to learn that coverage of the intersection of religion and politics tends to oversimplify both. If this oversimplification occurred to the benefit or detriment of neither side of the political divide, then the weaknesses in coverage of religion would be of only academic interest. But as this study documents, coverage of religion not only overrepresents some voices and underrepresents others, it does so in a way that is consistently advantageous to conservatives.
As in many areas, the decisions journalists make when deciding which voices to include in their stories have serious consequences. What is the picture of religious opinion? Who is a religious leader? Whose views represent important groups of believers? Every time a journalist writes a story, he or she answers these questions by deciding whom to quote and how to characterize their views.
Religion is often depicted in the news media as a politically divisive force, with two sides roughly paralleling the broader political divide: On one side are cultural conservatives who ground their political values in religious beliefs; and on the other side are secular liberals, who have opted out of debates that center on religion-based values. The truth, however is far different: close to 90 percent of Americans today self-identify as religious, while only 22 percent belong to traditionalist sects. Yet in the cultural war depicted by news media as existing across religious lines, centrist and progressive voices are marginalized or absent altogether.
In order to begin to assess how the news media paint the picture of religion in America today, this study measured the extent to which religious leaders, both conservative and progressive, are quoted, mentioned, and interviewed in the news media.
Among the study's key findings:
- Combining newspapers and television, conservative religious leaders were quoted, mentioned, or interviewed in news stories 2.8 times as often as were progressive religious leaders.
- On television news -- the three major television networks, the three major cable news channels, and PBS -- conservative religious leaders were quoted, mentioned, or interviewed almost 3.8 times as often as progressive leaders.
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In major newspapers, conservative religious leaders were quoted, mentioned, or interviewed 2.7 times as often as progressive leaders.
Despite the fact most religious Americans are moderate or progressive, in the news media it is overwhelmingly conservative leaders who are presented as the voice of religion. This represents a particularly meaningful distortion since progressive religious leaders tend to focus on different issues and offer an entirely different perspective than their conservative counterparts.
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"I urge the news media to reflect on Media Matters' findings and take significant steps to include progressive religious voices in the national debate."
Supporting Documents
- Read the Report
- Download the PDF (PDF, 198K)
- Press Conference Video, 05/29/07
- Press Release: Leaders Call for Balanced Religious Debate, 05/29/07
- Press Release: Religious Progressives Left Behind, 05/29/07
Media Appearances
06/09/07: Paul Waldman on The Time is Now
06/06/07: Paul Waldman on The Thom Hartmann Radio Program
06/06/07: Paul Waldman on The Santita Jackson Show
06/01/07: Paul Waldman on NPR's On the Media
05/31/07: Paul Waldman on The Jeff Farias Show
05/31/07: Eric Boehlert on The Pat Lynch Show
05/31/07: Eric Boehlert on The Bill Press Show
05/30/07: Eric Boehlert on Minnesota Air America's Minnesota Matters
05/29/07: Paul Waldman on Head-on with Bob Kincaid
05/29/07: Eric Boehlert on The Lionel Show
05/29/07: Paul Waldman on The Jay Marvin Show
News Coverage
- 06/03/07: The Revealer: God Squads Face Off!
- 06/02/07: The Washington Post: In Brief: Religious 'Progressives': Seeking Media Coverage
- 06/01/07: God is for Suckers!: Religious Leanings
- 06/01/07: GetReligion.org: Media matters, religion doesn't
- 06/01/07: Dallas Baptist Standard: Media bias? Not the way some might think
- 05/31/07: Inter Press Service News Agency: Religious Right Gets More Than Its 15 Minutes
- 05/31/07: ReligionandSpirituality.com: Media 'exagerrate' right-wing influence
- 05/31/07: East Valley Tribune's Beyond Belief (AZ): Religious sides want big media's ear
- 05/31/07: Citizenlink.org: Religious Left Calls for More Air Time
- 05/31/07: Associated Baptist Press: Study says American news media overplays religious conservatives
- 05/30/07:FAIR: Media Matters: Left Behind
- 05/30/07:StreetProphets.com: "The Reality of Religious Faith in America"
- 05/30/07:Blog for America: Wednesday News Roundup
- 05/30/07: EthicsDaily.com: Study Says Media Gives Too Much Ink to Religious Right
- 05/30/07: Reason: Because the Bible Says So...
- 05/30/07: Jewschool: Michegaas
- 05/30/07: friendlyathiest.com: Who Represents the Religious?
- 05/30/07: CBN News: Conservative Christians and the Media
- 05/30/07: Alternet.org: The Religious Left is Left Out by the Commercial Media
- 05/30/07: CNS News: 'Progressive' Christians Say Media Coverage Skewed to Religious Right
- 05/30/07: The Christian Post: Report: Media Skewing Religion with Dominant Conservative Voices
- 05/30/07: One News Now: 'Progressive' Christians say media coverage skewed to Religious Right
- 05/30/07: Mobile Register's For The Love Blog (AL): Analyze this
- 05/29/07: Chicago Tribune's The Swamp: News media leave behind progressive Christians
- 05/29/07: Worldwide Faith News: Faith in Public Life holds a news conference on "Left Behind: The Skewed Representation of Religion in the Major News Media."
- 05/29/07: Arkansas Times' Arkansas Blog: Religion in media -- UPDATE
- 05/29/07: Commonweal Magazine: Religious Conservatives and Religious Progressives in the Media
- 05/29/07: Street Prophets: Left Behind
- 05/29/07: Atrios: Left Behind
- 05/29/07: Think Progress: Conservative religious leaders dominate media coverage.
- 05/29/07: Alternet.org: Why have we heard so little of the voices of reason among American Christians? It turns out they've been talking, but couldn't make themselves heard
- 05/29/07: Daily Kos: Religion: Progressives Left Behind?
- 05/29/07: Reform Judaism Religious Action Center Blog: Left Behind: The Skewed Representation of Religion in Major News Media
- 05/29/07: Crooks and Liars: Your liberal media on Religion
- 05/29/07: Jewish Telegraphic Agency: Saperstein: Religion coverage unbalanced
- 05/29/07: Fidelis: Fidelis Dismisses Religious Left Media 'Report'


