Pew reporting:
or the second time in a decade, the believability ratings for major
news organizations have suffered broad-based declines. In the new
survey, positive believability ratings have fallen significantly for
nine of 13 news organizations tested. This follows a similar downturn in
positive believability ratings that occurred between 2002 and 2004.
The falloff in credibility affects news organizations in most
sectors: national newspapers, such as the New York Times and USA Today,
all three cable news outlets, as well as the broadcast TV networks and NPR.
Across all 13 news organizations included in the survey, the average
positive believability rating (3 or 4 on a 4-point scale) is 56%. In
2010, the average positive rating was 62%. A decade ago, the average
rating for the news organizations tested was 71%. Since 2002, every news
outlet’s believability rating has suffered a double-digit drop, except
for local daily newspapers and local TV news. The New York Times was not
included in this survey until 2004, but its believability rating has
fallen by 13 points since then.
These are among the major findings of a survey by the Pew Research
Center for the People & the Press, conducted July 19-22 among 1,001
adults. The survey asks people to rate individual news organizations on
believability using a 4-point scale. A rating of 4 means someone
believes “all or most” of what the news organization says; a rating of 1
means someone believes “almost nothing” of what they say.
http://www.people-press.org/2012/08/16/further-decline-in-credibility-ratings-for-most-news-organizations/
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