So a Harvard study refuting your position isn't enough to sway you? Fuck, it even gives the breakdown in coverage; somehow Mr Sanders got a LOT less coverage than Clinton. So you'll admit the coverage was biased- then turn around and say it doesn't matter?
Da fuk are you smoking? I want some!
You're losing a lot of credibility here.
I don't think I have credibility with you on this anyway. I suppose I can go below zero. I'm pretty sure what I'm smoking doesn't compare to yours, tty. At my low rate of consumption, I harvested about 20 years worth of buds from my first attempt at growing my own. I'll be glad to share but be prepared to augment mine with your own.
I didn't say a Harvard study swayed my position. I said the study showed Clinton's negative coverage was yuuuuuuuge, which causes me to dispute the idea that Clinton had such yuuuuuuuge control of the media as to sway the election.
Here is the full report.
http://shorensteincenter.org/pre-primary-news-coverage-2016-trump-clinton-sanders/#_ftn22
I used graphics from an article that referred to the report.
Some other graphics are shown below. The intent of the report was to discuss the "invisible primary" -- the year before the primaries, during which, in the words of the author:
Of all the indicators of success in the invisible primary, media exposure is arguably the most important.
Because the primary season is compressed, an early strong start in the season is very important. This is why the invisible primary has an effect on results. It's an interesting read. Or was to me. I don't see bias in the article. I recommend you take a look and decide for yourself.
Unsurprisingly, the overall winner of the invisible primary season was Trump. On the Democratic Party's side, Clinton came out ahead but not by much. Which kind of describes the end result of the primaries.
Sander's name recognition at the beginning of the pre-primary year was the lowest of all the other candidates and Clinton had the best name recognition. Clinton received about 3 times more press coverage than Sanders did but a lot of it was really bad. As the candidate with the lowest name recognition at the beginning of the invisible primary, Sanders got the least coverage until the debates, when he started gaining traction with the press and very favorable tone in their reporting.
Overall, during the the pre-primary season Clinton received much worse press coverage compared to Sanders. It wasn't even close. Also, based upon the tone of press coverage, Sanders won the debates in spite of the Clinton getting questions in one of the debates ahead of time. So tell me, does this show that the DNC's attempt to influence coverage was particularly effective?
The following shows month-to month tone of coverage for Sanders.
a negative value indicates more negative coverage than positive coverage
The following shows month-to-month of tone of coverage for Clinton:
a negative value indicates more negative coverage than positive coverage
Overall, I agree with
@Padawanbater2 in his view that Sander's climb from obscurity to contending for the candidacy was a win for the millennial voter and a movement in the right direction. I also contend that in order to win, Sanders needed to do more before the invisible primary started and his ground game in the south was weak when the primaries started. This is probably a funding issue but also shows how reliant candidates are upon free media coverage, probably more so than in elections held 30 years ago.
Social media is a new factor in elections that will take a larger role next election cycle. Who knows what that means?
The status quo for primaries should not stand. I support many measures to fix the problem that agree with yours. Or at least I think so.