News with an attitude: Assessing the mechanisms underlying the effects of opinionated news

Author(s)
Mark Boukes, Hajo Boomgaarden, Marjolein Moorman, Claes de Vreese
Abstract

Opinionated news targets communities of likeminded viewers, relies on dramaturgical storytelling techniques, and shares characteristics with political satire. Accordingly, opinionated news should be understood as a specific form of political entertainment. We have investigated the mechanisms underlying the effects of opinionated news on political attitudes using an experimental design that employed manipulated television news items. Findings confirm that opinionated news positively affects policy attitudes via its presumed influence on others and subsequent perceptions of the opinion climate. However, opinionated news also negatively affects attitudes via hostile media perceptions and evoked anger, especially for people with incongruent political preferences. Due to these opposing processes, we found no total effect of opinionated news on policy attitudes. Conditions are discussed under which either the positive or the negative indirect effect is likely to dominate.

Organisation(s)
External organisation(s)
University of Amsterdam (UvA)
Journal
Mass Communication and Society
Volume
17
Pages
354-378
No. of pages
25
ISSN
1520-5436
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/15205436.2014.891136
Publication date
05-2014
Peer reviewed
Yes
Austrian Fields of Science 2012
508012 Media impact studies
ASJC Scopus subject areas
Communication
Portal url
https://ucrisportal.univie.ac.at/en/publications/news-with-an-attitude-assessing-the-mechanisms-underlying-the-effects-of-opinionated-news(3bf6ed9f-9bf7-4172-a709-3fccd6b0637e).html