CNN and MSNBC’s first 100 days of reporting on Israel’s war on Gaza showed a consistent double standard in its coverage, with Palestinians receiving far less sympathetic and humanizing coverage than either Israelis during the same period or Ukrainians during the first 100 days after Russia’s invasion, a Nation analysis of major media coverage has found.

Finding 1:

Sympathetic victims like journalists, refugees, and children are mentioned more in Ukraine than in Gaza, despite a significantly wider gap in casualties and human suffering.


Finding 2:

On CNN and MSNBC, emotive words such as “brutal,” “massacre,” “slaughter, “barbaric,” and “savage” were overwhelmingly used to describe the killing of Israelis and Ukrainians, and almost never used to describe the killing of Palestinians.


Finding 3:

CNN and MSNBC covered the impact of Russia’s invasion on civilians twice as often as they did the impact of Israel’s bombing and siege of Gaza on civilians, despite the latter having a death toll five times that of the former.

    • Flocklesscrow@lemm.ee
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      2 months ago

      News media is highly produced. I’d have a harder time believing these words aren’t being carefully chosen for their impact.

      • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldM
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        2 months ago

        I can’t speak for the national level, but I’ve worked in local news media and no it isn’t, it’s a shit show.

        • frezik@midwest.social
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          2 months ago

          Right–everyone in the world is just winging it. Some of them are winging it in ways that create dead children.

          • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldM
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            2 months ago

            I mean I don’t know if they are winging it higher up and we never dealt with this sort of subject since it was local news. For all I know, it was designed to be this way on that level.

            All I can say was at the level where I was, it was absolute chaos all the time and the producers basically spent most of their time on the phone trying to find something to fill that noontime half hour and then frantically writing the script.