Introduction
In the wake of Don Imus’ racially and sexually insensitive comment about the Rutgers University women’s basketball team in April 2007, new attention was paid to the issue of diversity in media, particularly on television. Soon after, Media Matters for America issued a report about the diversity of guests on cable news in prime time, to document the degree to which different programs and networks were presenting to their viewers a picture that resembled the American public. The results of the study, titled Locked Out: the Lack of Gender and Ethnic Diversity on Cable News, were not encouraging: The guests on all three networks’ programs were overwhelmingly white and male.
This report updates and expands those data for current cable network programs. We examined four programs on each of the three cable news networks during prime time, and recorded the gender and ethnicity of every guest who appeared during the month of May 2008 – nearly 1,700 guest appearances in all. The results demonstrate that, at least in prime time, whatever effort the networks have made to increase the diversity of their guests have borne little fruit. Although there may be more AfricanAmerican political analysts appearing during the daytime hours (particularly on CNN and MSNBC) in prime time – when the audiences are largest – white men continue to dominate.