The press plays a crucial role early in the preprimary presidential campaign, determining which candidates appear viable to voters, contributors, and other media. This process necessarily benefits some candidates over others. We analyze how the press winnowed the candidate fields of both parties in the early 2008 preprimary campaign. We find coverage remarkably similar across a wide range of traditional and new media, including newspaper, radio, television, cable, legacy and web-native Internet news, and talk shows. The media ignored most candidates to concentrate on the Democratic contest between Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama while paying less attention to the Republican race. Tone towards candidates was uniform except on partisan talk ...
The role of the Internet as a tool for participation and organization has been considered the most i...
The Internet was a major factor in the 2008 U.S. presidential campaign and has become an important t...
This study explores how websites affiliated with leading U.S. newspapers covered the 2008 campaign a...
The press plays a crucial role early in the preprimary presidential campaign, determining which cand...
At the turn of the 21st century, the U.S. public flocked to the Internet, social media, and other di...
In addition, the two path models indicated that candidate website agenda in the campaign initial pha...
Throughout history mass media has affected political campaigns. Through radio, television, and most ...
The explosion of new political speech in digital formats in the 2008 elections, especially those inv...
This article provides the first comparison of campaign coverage of candidates in an Australian feder...
Recent research has suggested that traditional and online news sources may differ with respect to th...
New technologies – with perhaps the most notable being radio and television – often change the face ...
This paper presents an empirical analysis of web news content during the 2008 USA Presidential Campa...
The Internet is becoming an increasingly important component of political campaigns. This study empl...
The role of the Internet as a tool for participation and organization has been considered the most i...
This paper presents an empirical analysis of web news content during the 2008 USA Presidential Camp...
The role of the Internet as a tool for participation and organization has been considered the most i...
The Internet was a major factor in the 2008 U.S. presidential campaign and has become an important t...
This study explores how websites affiliated with leading U.S. newspapers covered the 2008 campaign a...
The press plays a crucial role early in the preprimary presidential campaign, determining which cand...
At the turn of the 21st century, the U.S. public flocked to the Internet, social media, and other di...
In addition, the two path models indicated that candidate website agenda in the campaign initial pha...
Throughout history mass media has affected political campaigns. Through radio, television, and most ...
The explosion of new political speech in digital formats in the 2008 elections, especially those inv...
This article provides the first comparison of campaign coverage of candidates in an Australian feder...
Recent research has suggested that traditional and online news sources may differ with respect to th...
New technologies – with perhaps the most notable being radio and television – often change the face ...
This paper presents an empirical analysis of web news content during the 2008 USA Presidential Campa...
The Internet is becoming an increasingly important component of political campaigns. This study empl...
The role of the Internet as a tool for participation and organization has been considered the most i...
This paper presents an empirical analysis of web news content during the 2008 USA Presidential Camp...
The role of the Internet as a tool for participation and organization has been considered the most i...
The Internet was a major factor in the 2008 U.S. presidential campaign and has become an important t...
This study explores how websites affiliated with leading U.S. newspapers covered the 2008 campaign a...