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American Politics Research
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The Effects of Media Interpretation for Citizen Evaluations of Politicians' Messages

Brian J. Fogarty

University of Missouri at St. Louis

Jennifer Wolak

University of Colorado at Boulder, wolakj{at}colorado.edu

Although politicians prefer to communicate directly with the public, political sound bites in the nightly news are shrinking and primetime presidential press conferences are becoming increasingly uncommon. Instead, people primarily receive the messages of politicians as interpreted by journalists. What are the consequences of this interpretation for how citizens evaluate political messages? This article compares how people evaluate mediated political accounts and those delivered by politicians directly. Using a set of experiments, this article considers whether the power of politicians to inform and persuade people is limited or enhanced through the interpretation of journalists. This article finds that although people respond similarly to message content, whether from the politicians or from the media, evaluations of the message source and political processes are improved when politicians communicate directly with the public.

Key Words: political communication • source cues • mass media • message reception • persuasion • news coverage

This version was published on January 1, 2009

American Politics Research, Vol. 37, No. 1, 129-154 (2009)
DOI: 10.1177/1532673X08319953


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