As goes the statue, so goes the war: The emergence of the victory frame in television coverage of the Iraq War
S Aday, J Cluverius, S Livingston - Journal of Broadcasting & …, 2005 - Taylor & Francis
S Aday, J Cluverius, S Livingston
Journal of Broadcasting & Electronic Media, 2005•Taylor & FrancisThis study analyzes how broadcast news coverage of the toppling of a statue of Saddam
Hussein on April 9, 2003, employed a" victory" frame that crowded out other potential news
narratives from that day, notably the heavy fighting continuing throughout Baghdad and
other parts of Iraq. A second level of analysis comparing the news agendas of the 2
networks in the week prior to and the week after April 9th suggests that the victory frame had
the effect of dramatically reducing the amount of battle-related stories.
Hussein on April 9, 2003, employed a" victory" frame that crowded out other potential news
narratives from that day, notably the heavy fighting continuing throughout Baghdad and
other parts of Iraq. A second level of analysis comparing the news agendas of the 2
networks in the week prior to and the week after April 9th suggests that the victory frame had
the effect of dramatically reducing the amount of battle-related stories.
This study analyzes how broadcast news coverage of the toppling of a statue of Saddam Hussein on April 9, 2003, employed a "victory" frame that crowded out other potential news narratives from that day, notably the heavy fighting continuing throughout Baghdad and other parts of Iraq. A second level of analysis comparing the news agendas of the 2 networks in the week prior to and the week after April 9th suggests that the victory frame had the effect of dramatically reducing the amount of battle-related stories.
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