Fox News does not prepare you for questions about news:

The study concludes that media sources have a significant impact on the number of questions that people were able to answer correctly. The largest effect is that of Fox News: all else being equal, someone who watched only Fox News would be expected to answer just 1.04 domestic questions correctly — a figure which is significantly worse than if they had reported watching no media at all. On the other hand, if they listened only to NPR, they would be expected to answer 1.51 questions correctly; viewers of Sunday morning talk shows fare similarly well. And people watching only The Daily Show with Jon Stewart could answer about 1.42 questions correctly.

“These differences may be small, but even small differences are important when we’re talking about millions of people”

The study claims that partisan media is to blame—they say MSNBC is almost as bad as Fox—but I think it has more to do with credulousness. NPR and The Daily Show are both much more likely to question the conventional wisdom they’re reporting, and the Sunday morning talk shows at least spend a lot of time on a single subject, even if they are echo chambers.

One reply on “Your Daily No-Duh”

  1. If anyone is interested in how Media actually works, you should watch Julian Assange’s show “World Tomorrow” episode 6 (it’s on youtube).

    The President of Ecuador explains that civil reforms are only as possible as the media allows.

    With this media, nothing will get done. It is our TV media that people should be protesting against, not Wall Street. If OWS took over the buildings of CNN, Fox News, and MSNBC in NYC, then we might have the chance for real reforms. The television is just lying to people and purposefully hiding very alarming things. It is in the interest of the television media to prop up the worst parts of our society, so they will never be adversarial to it, they will not tell the truth.

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