Geri Alumit Zeldes

Geri Alumit Zeldes
Michigan State University | MSU · School of Journalism

Ph.D.

About

26
Publications
3,140
Reads
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240
Citations
Citations since 2017
5 Research Items
114 Citations
20172018201920202021202220230510152025
20172018201920202021202220230510152025
20172018201920202021202220230510152025
20172018201920202021202220230510152025
Additional affiliations
August 2004 - August 2017
Michigan State University
Position
  • Professor

Publications

Publications (26)
Article
The study examines the extent to which Hispanic/Latino Americans and non-Hispanic White Americans report that meat is an important aspect of their cultural beliefs and practices. An online national survey was completed using quota sampling to recruit approximately equal groups of U.S. Hispanic/Latino and non-Hispanic White Americans (n = 512). A pa...
Article
Consumption of red meat has been linked to a variety of health issues, yet Americans are resistant to reducing their meat consumption. Family communication environments shape beliefs about food and meat consumption, and therefore are locations for potential interventions to change the way people think about food. Families are embedded in cultures,...
Article
Examining 788 news articles in the People’s Daily from 2003 to 2013, this study explores basic trends in the representation of people with disabilities in an official newspaper in China. The study proposes that the portrayal of people with disabilities has increased because the living standards of people with disabilities in China have improved sub...
Chapter
Full-text available
https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-030-01659-3_19 News blogs provide the media and individuals with analyses and information about crises. The importance of news blogs in coverage of crises brings attention to the importance of examining journalist and citizen bloggers, and their coverage of three crises: natural disaster, terrorist a...
Article
This study examined seven historically Black newspapers’ coverage of the landmark Supreme Court case Loving v. Virginia (1967), which overturned anti-miscegenation laws that prevented non-White individuals from marrying White individuals. A content analysis of frames and source usage within 31 news stories about the case indicated that about half o...
Article
Full-text available
This study examines partisan bias in the broadcast news coverage of the 2008 presidential election by replicating measures used in the previous 2 elections. The study data, overall, indicate a Republican tilt in the 2008 election, contrary to more balanced coverage in the 2000 and 2004 elections. The findings are, however, consistent with other stu...
Article
By examining source use and the emergence of frames, this study analyzes news coverage of the 2006 War in Lebanon and 2008–2009 War in Gaza in two local newspapers in Detroit, Michigan, USA: The Detroit News and the Detroit Free Press. Metropolitan Detroit is home to the largest concentration of Arab individuals outside of the Middle East, as well...
Article
TV evening news coverage of the 2008 presidential election by broadcast, cable, and public networks was predominately male and Caucasian in terms of reporters and sources. However, according to our content analysis of 888 campaign stories, viewers saw the least amount of source diversity if they watched the evening news on broadcast networks ABC, C...
Article
This study fills a gap in scholarship by exploring historical news coverage of interracial relationships. It examines coverage by The New York Times, Washington Post and Times-Herald, and Chicago Tribune of the progression of the landmark civil rights case of Loving v. Virginia, in which the Supreme Court overturned Virginia's anti-miscegenation la...
Article
Courses: Journalism, Mass Communication, Media Studies, Islamic Studies, Religious Studies Objectives: To facilitate critical thinking when analyzing news media, and to produce a wiki-based best practices document to encourage better reporting, specifically on Muslims and Islam
Article
Full-text available
Our content analysis of 2,075 campaign stories aired by 3 broadcast and 3 cable networks during the 2004 presidential campaign revealed that female and non-White reporters at broadcast networks were generally more aggressive in their source use when compared to their male and White colleagues, using a greater number of sources and in most cases als...
Article
NBC, Fox, and CNN networks aired during their first nightly newscasts 324 stories in 2004 and 2008 that featured a visual of the candidates' spouses fulfilling the “escort” role. The spouses during these campaigns were largely seen but not heard. Fox in 2004 aired less than 1% of the candidates' wives speaking when compared to how much video it air...
Article
Full-text available
This study conceptualizes news bias as a causal factor producing systematic imbalance in the coverage of conflicting sides. Partisan bias is distinguished from structural bias by coverage that systematically favors one side with more prominence and attention. Content analysis was used to compare the television networks' balance in their treatment o...
Article
Full-text available
Broadcast and cable network evening news shows gave more prominence, time, and attention to Democrat John Kerry than to President George Bush in their 2004 presidential election coverage. Broadcast networks were more balanced in their aggregate attention to the candidates than were the cable networks. Individual broadcast network stories and segmen...
Article
This study examined context variables (reporter speculation, multiple viewpoints, and story emphasis) and source variables (anonymous sources and source transparency) in broadcast television coverage of the 2004 Democratic presidential primaries. Primary coverage was compared with coverage of other major stories. Primary coverage was no more focuse...
Article
This study examined how race and gender of reporters and community diversity influenced use of women and minority sources in local television coverage of the 2002 governor's race in Michigan. Content analysis of campaign stories broadcasted by four local television stations revealed that women reporters were more likely than their male colleagues t...
Article
Full-text available
Our content analysis of 333 campaign stories broadcast by ABC, CBS, and NBC during the 2000 presidential campaign found that reporting staff diversity, specifically the presence of women and minority reporters, was related to more diverse source usage. Stories by women and minority reporters were more likely to use and give time to women and minori...
Article
Local television stories and segments covering the 2002 open race for governor in Michigan were compared with the same stations' coverage of the 1998 election in which an incumbent governor ran against a challenger. Coverage of the 2002 race was more even handed toward the Republican and Democratic candidates, as predicted. Overall, multistory segm...

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Project (1)