Political commentators warn that the fragmentation of the modern media landscape induces voters to withdraw into ?information cocoons? and segregate along ideological lines. We show that the option to abstain breaks ideological segregation and generates ?cross-over? in news consumption: voters with considerable leanings toward a candidate demand information that is less biased toward that candidate than voters who are more centrist. This non-monotonicity in the demand for slant makes voters? ideologies non-recoverable from their choice of news media and generates disproportionate demand for media outlets that are centrist or only moderately biased. It also implies that polarization of the electorate may lead to ideological moderation in new...
We employ several different approaches to estimate the political position of Australian media outlet...
We develop a theory of media slant as a systematic \u85ltering of polit-ical news that reduces multi...
This paper investigates how mass media potentially act on preferences for redistribution. Our hypoth...
Political commentators warn that the fragmentation of the modern media landscape induces voters to w...
We formalize the concept of media slant as a relative emphasis on different issues of political inte...
When consumers value cognitive consistency between the news they read and policies they support, pol...
This paper presents a model of partisan media trying to persuade a sophisticated and heterogeneous a...
We study media slant in a model of job choice and voting. We de ne slant as the relative emphasis on...
The pervasiveness of partisan media and the 24/7 news cycle allow ample opportunity for partisan-mot...
Does media choice cause polarization, or merely reflect it? We investigate a critical aspect of this...
This paper assesses the normative and positive claims regarding the consequences of biased media usi...
The recent increase in partisan media has generated interest in whether such outlets polarize viewer...
We show that the demand for news varies with the perceived affinity of the news organization to the ...
We know that watching partisan media makes people feel more negative towards political parties that ...
This paper provides a model of the market for news where profit-maximizing media outlets choose thei...
We employ several different approaches to estimate the political position of Australian media outlet...
We develop a theory of media slant as a systematic \u85ltering of polit-ical news that reduces multi...
This paper investigates how mass media potentially act on preferences for redistribution. Our hypoth...
Political commentators warn that the fragmentation of the modern media landscape induces voters to w...
We formalize the concept of media slant as a relative emphasis on different issues of political inte...
When consumers value cognitive consistency between the news they read and policies they support, pol...
This paper presents a model of partisan media trying to persuade a sophisticated and heterogeneous a...
We study media slant in a model of job choice and voting. We de ne slant as the relative emphasis on...
The pervasiveness of partisan media and the 24/7 news cycle allow ample opportunity for partisan-mot...
Does media choice cause polarization, or merely reflect it? We investigate a critical aspect of this...
This paper assesses the normative and positive claims regarding the consequences of biased media usi...
The recent increase in partisan media has generated interest in whether such outlets polarize viewer...
We show that the demand for news varies with the perceived affinity of the news organization to the ...
We know that watching partisan media makes people feel more negative towards political parties that ...
This paper provides a model of the market for news where profit-maximizing media outlets choose thei...
We employ several different approaches to estimate the political position of Australian media outlet...
We develop a theory of media slant as a systematic \u85ltering of polit-ical news that reduces multi...
This paper investigates how mass media potentially act on preferences for redistribution. Our hypoth...