Hispanics in the NewsThe Hispanic Experience
One of the central findings about the portrayal of Hispanics in the press is that it mostly comes as bits and pieces inside coverage of other news events. There is little coverage directly about the lives of Hispanics and their experiences in the U.S. Of the 645 stories that related in some way to Hispanics and the Hispanic population, just 57 were primarily about Hispanics as a group. In this select universe of stories, what type of image does the press portray? What kinds of subjects triggered specific coverage? During the time period studied, four main subject areas drove the coverage of Hispanic life in the U.S. Three of them inherently overlapped with each other: the troubled U.S. economy, immigrants—both legal and illegal, and the Hispanic population overall. The other main area dealt with the question of fair treatment and incidents of racial bias. There were a few stories about the lives of Hispanics that were not tied specifically to news events. One from the Washington Post on March 8, reported that second-generation Hispanics and Asians are marrying within their own ethnicities at growing rates. As the number of immigrants continues to grow, according to the story, so has the pool of potential partners. A handful of stories talked about other impacts from the growing immigrant population. An NBC Nightly News package, for instance, considered the population spread through a look at a small Wisconsin city, Waukesha. “Latino families having families, growing roots and opportunity,” NBC Correspondent Lee Cowan reported. A New York Times article on April 19 related some of the problems that arise in absorbing new immigrant groups. Smaller communities, the article stated, find themselves “unused to [the immigrants’] presence and unprepared to meet their needs.” The New York Times also considered the impact of this growth on schools. A March 15 article examined a Virginia high school that had a surge of immigrant students. This school responded, according to the article, by “channeling them into a school within a school. It is, in effect, a contemporary form of segregation that provides students learning English intensive support to meet rising academic standards.” Finally the question of fair treatment and sometimes even racism spurred broad stories about Hispanics in the U.S. The Associated Press, for example, conducted a months-long investigation of the accidental arrest and deportation of legal immigrants, finding 55 such cases: “In a drive to crack down on illegal immigrants, the United States has locked up or thrown out dozens, probably many more, of its own citizens over the past eight years.” Fox News anchor Bret Baier commented that Obama’s choice of Judd Gregg as Commerce Secretary nominee caused some trepidation among black and Latino voters, as they feared he would cut census funding and thus potentially government money to their districts. In addition to broad discussion of fairness, some outlets produced stories about specific incidents of racial bias. Anderson Cooper 360 investigated one Texas town where Latino and black drivers claim they are being disproportionately pulled over by police. And ABC News investigated a club in Philadelphia that attempted to bar a group of black and Latino inner-city children from swimming in their pool. In the end, though, this coverage of Hispanics made up a very small part of the portrait of Hispanics in the media. In order to get the fuller picture, we can look more broadly at the larger swath of coverage. |
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