Paul's Literature Review

Gentzkow and Shapiro then asked what other factors help explain a newspaper’s slant. They found that the most important variable is the political orientation of people living within the paper’s market. For example, the higher the vote share received by Bush in 2004 in the newspaper’s market (horizontal axis below), the higher the Gentzkow-Shapiro measure of conservative slant (vertical axis).

On the other hand, the politics of the paper’s owner seem to matter much less. For example, once one controls for geographic factors, there is no statistically significant correlation between the newspaper’s own slant (horizontal axis below) and average slant of papers in other communities owned by the same owner (vertical axis).

My claim: We have come upon something interfering with political journalism’s “sense of reality” as the philosopher Isaiah Berlin called it (see section 5.1) And I think I have a term for the confusing factor: a quest for innocence in reportage and dispute description. Innocence, meaning a determination not to be implicated, enlisted, or seen by the public as involved. That’s what created the pattern I’ve called “regression to a phony mean.” That’s what motivated the rise of he said, she said reporting.