Packaging the Games for Viewer Consumption: Gender, Ethnicity, and Nationality in NBC's Coverage of the 2004 Summer Olympics

Analysis of 70 prime-time hours of host and reporter commentary in NBC's 2004 Athens Summer Olympic telecast located the degree and forms of gender, ethnic, and national biases hidden within the prime-time network telecasts. Gendered results indicate that male athletes were more likely to be de...

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Veröffentlicht in:Communication quarterly 2007-01, Vol.55 (1), p.95-111
Hauptverfasser: Billings, Andrew C., Angelini, James R.
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description Analysis of 70 prime-time hours of host and reporter commentary in NBC's 2004 Athens Summer Olympic telecast located the degree and forms of gender, ethnic, and national biases hidden within the prime-time network telecasts. Gendered results indicate that male athletes were more likely to be depicted as courageous, lucky, and introverted, and received the majority of the clock-time and athlete mentions. Ethnic analyses revealed that more than two-thirds of the athlete mentions were white athletes, and that fourteen of the twenty most frequently mentioned athletes were white. Nationalistic differences were particularly significant, with eight noted differences in the types of descriptors employed about American and non-American athletes. Additionally, 85% of the most-mentioned athletes were Americans, and more American athletes than athletes from all other countries were mentioned.
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subjects Athletes
Citizenship
Ethnicity
Gender
Media coverage
Nationality
Olympic games
Olympics
Sport
Television news
title Packaging the Games for Viewer Consumption: Gender, Ethnicity, and Nationality in NBC's Coverage of the 2004 Summer Olympics
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