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Contents

Overview
 Intro | Major Trends | Key Findings | Public Attitudes |
 Author's Note |  Executive Summary | En Español

Special Reports
 Citizen Based Media | Lessons of the Election |  New Ventures

Year
 2008 Trends | Newspapers | Online | Network | Cable | Radio |
 Ethnic | Magazines | Religion in the News |  Interactive Topline

Survey
Intro | The Future of Journalism | Fundamental Values | Online Content | Distribution Methods | Profitability and Staffing Trends | Methodology | Topline

Year
 Intro | Content Analysis | Audience | Economics |
 News Investment | Ownership | Alternative Weeklies |
 Charts & Tables

Online
 Intro | Content Analysis | Audience | Economics |
 News Investment | Ownership | Charts & Tables

Network
 Intro | Content Analysis | Audience | Economics |
 News Investment | Ownership | Digital Trends |
 News Magazines | PBS | Charts & Tables

Cable
 Intro | Content Analysis | Audience | Economics |
 News Investment | Ownership | Digital Trends |
 Alternative Channels | Charts & Tables

Local
 Intro | Audience | Economics | News Investment | Ownership |  Digital Trends | Charts & Tables

Magazines
 Intro | Content Analysis | Audience | Economics |
 News Investment | Ownership | Digital Trends |
 Opinion Titles | Charts & Tables

Audio
 Intro | Content Analysis | Audience | Economics |
 News Investment | Ownership | Talk Radio | Charts & Tables

Ethnic
 Intro | Content Analysis | Hispanic | African American |
 The Obama Factor | Asian American | Native and Arab American |
 Charts & Tables

About The Study
 Methodology | Authors and Collaborators | Source Bibliography

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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Preface

The State of the News Media 2009 is the sixth edition of our annual report on the health and status of American journalism.

Our goals are to take stock of the revolution occurring in how Americans get information and provide a resource for citizens, journalists and researchers to make their own assessments. To do so we gather in one place as much data as possible about all the major sectors of journalism, identify trends, mark key indicators, note areas for further inquiry.

For each area we have produced original research and aggregated existing data into a narrative on the state of journalism that we hope is the most comprehensive anywhere. Statistical data also exists in an interactive format (see our index of charts), which allows users to customize their own graphics. The report also includes A Year in the News, a comprehensive content analysis of media performance based on more than 70,000 stories from 48 news outlets across five media sectors, as well as a special look at Hispanic and African American media and an Interactive Topline that lets users explore the data for themselves. This year’s study also includes special reports on Lessons of the Election, New Ventures online, a content analysis of Citizen Media in 46 communities. And coming soon: a Survey of Online Journalists and a look back at Campaign Coverage.

This report is the work of the Pew Research Center’s Project for Excellence in Journalism, a nonpolitical, nonpartisan research institute. The study is funded by the Pew Charitable Trusts and was produced with the help of a number of authors and collaborators , including Rick Edmonds of the Poynter Institute and a host of industry readers.

The full report is comprehensive, totaling nearly 180,000 words.

Click here for information about printing the report.

 
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