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‘Bullets as bacteria’

Television news magazines’ use of the public health model for reporting violence

Renita Coleman

Louisiana State University, rcoleman{at}lsu.edu

David D. Perlmutter

Louisiana State University, dperlmu{at}lsu.edu

Surveys of mass media content related to social violence suggest that it generally focuses on the individual, atomistic ‘act’ (e.g. the bang-bang car chase) rather than issues of cause and prevention. Yet, increasingly - but with controversy - doctors, health officials and activists have pushed for a ‘public health’ model of reporting news about crime and violence that looks at interactions between the victim, the agent of injury or death, and the environment in which the injury or death took place rather than viewing it in strictly individual terms. In this study of television news-magazine stories, we found a strong emphasis on episodic and personal stories, with minor allusions to greater social issues. The emphasis on entertainment seemed to negate any promised ‘public health’ angles. We conclude that the challenge for the public health model is to find ‘scripts’ that journalists deem to be publicly consumable and ratings friendly.

Key Words: crime • journalism • news • public health • television • violence

Journalism, Vol. 6, No. 1, 24-42 (2005)
DOI: 10.1177/1464884905048951


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[Abstract] [PDF]