Habituation: The Effect of Television on Politics

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One of the readings that captured my attention was Diana C. Mutz's Effects of "In-Your-Face" Television Discourse on Perceptions of a Legitimate Opposition. American news media has interested me since I moved to the country, probably because television of that kind was a complete novelty for me until then. The most striking feature that I noticed before anything else was the rampant partisanship and the complete lack of effort to even disguise it. The media's importance in a country like Pakistan is diminished, since other issues of even great fundamental importance to the well-being of democracy usually dominate discussion. When Governor assassinations are celebrated and the assassins vigorously defended by hordes of Pakistani lawyers public and private, the expectations of televised media and its quality become secondary to a host of other such issues. Once in the United States, however, the importance of the media and the effects of its methods become not only clear but highlighted by the extremeties of television networks themselves and the pattern of discourse it helps maintain amongst the public. Although American entertainment television was widely and easily accessible, the news portion of television was usually a choice between Pakistani networks or the BBC and CNN. Exposure to the partisanship of networks such as Fox News and MSNBC was received, for the most part, through Jon Stewart's Daily Show. Due to this, at least personally, there was an inherent expectation that Stewart's portrayal of such networks was either a caricature or itself a biased take. In this context, it is likely that my surprise and shock that Stewart's clips did not simply choose those instances in the news with the most outrageous presentations ... ... middle of paper ... ...on's transformation of the media has included politicians becoming ever more susceptible to accusations of crossing party lines, and being held accountable for doing so on various networks in front of the millions of Republicans or Democrats watching whose votes they need to continue their careers. Politicians today are exposed to their constituents through the television more than any other medium, and it is on the television that they are most likely to be grilled by a staunchly partisan commentator in the vein of a Rachel Maddow or a Bill O'Reilly. The connection between Washington and the average voter is almost entirely made through the context the televised news media chooses to put it in, explaining the apparent reflection of television news media partisanship around the halls of Congress, the White House and living rooms and dinner tables around the country.

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