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One analysis found that major US satirists, such as Jon Stewart and Steven Colbert, have given more coverage to climate change than many of the news channels – although admittedly, this is a pretty low bar to clear.
The study, published in BMJ Open, analysed 308 articles published over two years in seven UK national newspapers and found women's binge drinking was given more coverage, despite men drinking more in reality.
Chief among Mr. Nicholson's worries is that a speech to be delivered by President Clinton on the convention's opening night, Monday, would be given more coverage than the address by Gen. Colin L. Powell on the first night of the Republican gathering.
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"We're giving more coverage to curling now," said Tom Feuer, the executive producer for NBC.
[C1.] Two Iraq Milestones Elicited Different Coverage News media outlets gave more coverage to the 2,000th death in Iraq last week than they did to the 1,000th death last year -- perhaps evidence of changing sentiments on the war.
Decades of allegations about the mob's influence over Italian politics, some real, others imagined, have numbed Italians to the point where newspapers here give more coverage to unexpected bad weather.
That's the Women's World Cup, of course, though most news outlets gave more coverage to the tennis, Formula One, golf, cricket, and whatever other male-dominated championships were on at the time.
The magazine is giving more coverage to "urban" artists, such as US rappers Azealia Banks and Odd Future and was one of the first publications to alight on Lana Del Rey as new musical star.
Academic surveys have shown how newspapers belittled him from the moment he won his first leadership election, while broadcast bulletins systematically gave more coverage to his opponents than to his supporters.
As doctors expressed concern for the health of Emma Bonino, a leader of the small Radical Party who went on a hunger strike on Friday to protest insufficient news coverage of her party's top issues, Prime Minister Giuliano Amato asked TV networks to give more coverage to the party, which is anti-Vatican and argues that the abortion pill should be legal.
In his latest challenge to the established mores of American newsrooms, Mark H. Willes, the chief executive of the Times Mirror Company and the publisher of The Los Angeles Times, is devising an unorthodox plan to give more coverage and to sell more newspapers to women, African-American, Asian and Hispanic readers.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com