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Watching Haiti Disappear from the News

- April 30, 2010

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My second contribution to Salon’s The Numerologist is here. It builds on Anthony Downs’s notion of the issue-attention cycle and notes how well that describes coverage of natural disasters, of which the Haiti earthquake is the most recent.

To augment the post, consider these data from the Pew News Interest Index (pdf). In their Jan. 15-18 survey, 60% of respondents said they were following “very closely” news about “a major earthquake in Haiti.” In the Jan. 22-25 survey, 50% were following news of the earthquake very closely. In the Jan. 29-Feb.1 survey, the figure was 45%. In the Feb. 5-8 survey, it was 42%. Then, in a Feb. 12-15 survey, 37% said they were very closely following “the aftermath of a major earthquake and relief efforts in Haiti.” The decline in news attention is mirrored by a decline in the public’s attention.

(I thank Maeve Carey for helping gather the media data for the graph.)

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