Cable News
Cable Leads the Pack as Campaign News Source
Twitter, Facebook Play Very Modest Roles
Section 1: Campaign Interest and News Sources
Press Widely Criticized, But Trusted More than Other Information Sources
Views of the News Media: 1985-2011
Internet Gains on Television as Public’s Main News Source
More Young People Cite Internet than TV
Americans Spending More Time Following the News
Ideological News Sources: Who Watches and Why
Americans Spending More Time Following the News
Ideological News Sources: Who Watches and Why
Section 4: Who is Listening, Watching, Reading – and Why
Americans Spending More Time Following the News
Ideological News Sources: Who Watches and Why
Section 5: News Media Credibility
Internet Now Major Source of Campaign News
Continuing Partisan Divide in Cable TV News Audiences
Internet Now Major Source of Campaign News
Continuing Partisan Divide in Cable TV News Audience
Key News Audiences Now Blend Online and Traditional Sources
Audience Segments in a Changing News Environment
Watching, Reading and Listening to the News
Foreign Disasters Attract Interest Despite Modest Coverage
Cable News Out of Sync With Public Interest in Campaign
News Audiences Increasingly Politicized
Choice of President Matters More in 2004
I. Where Americans Go for News
Strong Opposition to Media Cross-Ownership Emerges
Public Wants Neutrality and Pro-American Point of View
Unusually High Interest In Bush's State Of The Union
Public Priorities Shifted by Recession and War
Highlights