The Column

Share this post

TV News Covered British Royal Visit 5,668% More Than Largest Academic Strike in U.S. History

thecolumn.substack.com

TV News Covered British Royal Visit 5,668% More Than Largest Academic Strike in U.S. History

Over the past three weeks, CNN, NBC News, CBS News, and ABC News have dedicated a total of 1 minute and 40 seconds to the 50,000-strong California academic worker strike.

Adam Johnson
Dec 6, 2022
38
2
Share this post

TV News Covered British Royal Visit 5,668% More Than Largest Academic Strike in U.S. History

thecolumn.substack.com

Over three weeks into the largest academic strike in U.S. history, U.S. TV news outlets have virtually ignored the story. With the exception of a one minute, 40 second segment on ABC’s Good Morning America on November 14, the first day of the strike, mainstream TV news—defined here as CNN, ABC News, NBC News, and CBS News—hasn’t covered the strike once. 

The Column is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.

In stark contrast, Prince Harry, Duke of Sussex, and William, Prince of Wales—who took separate trips to the United States over the past week—have received a total of 34 individual segments, or 1 hour and 36 minutes of coverage. Our tally of coverage can be seen here.

NBC News dedicated 39 minutes to the royal visits, ABC News 20 minutes, CBS news 12 minutes, and CNN 25 minutes. (Note: These figures do not include ABC, NBC, and CBS’s online only streaming platforms. If it did the number would likely be much greater.) Both Harry and William took separate trips to Boston, which producers at America’s leading TV news networks determined was of urgent and top news priority. NBC News and The Today Show, in particular, covered each and every move of the Princes’ visit like they were the moon landing. 

Twitter avatar for @TODAYshow
TODAY @TODAYshow
William and Kate, the newly-name Prince and Princess of Wales, are set to make a high-profile visit to the United States for the first time in nearly 10 years. @KeirSimmons joins us with the details.
1:08 PM ∙ Nov 28, 2022
69Likes16Retweets
Twitter avatar for @TODAYshow
TODAY @TODAYshow
Prince William and Princess Kate are set to arrive in Boston today ahead of the Earthshot Awards on Friday. @KeirSimmons reports on their royal trip.
3:39 PM ∙ Nov 30, 2022
468Likes66Retweets
Twitter avatar for @TODAYshow
TODAY @TODAYshow
As William and Kate, the Prince and Princess of Wales, embark on their first trip to the U.S. in nearly a decade, Buckingham Palace is dealing with allegations of racist comments made by lady-in-waiting Susan Hussey. @KeirSimmons shares the latest.
4:34 PM ∙ Dec 1, 2022
46Likes10Retweets
Twitter avatar for @TODAYshow
TODAY @TODAYshow
Prince William and Princess Kate wrapped up their trip to Boston on Friday. @KeirSimmons has more on their visit.
12:43 PM ∙ Dec 3, 2022
48Likes13Retweets
Twitter avatar for @TODAYshow
TODAY @TODAYshow
Prince William and Princess Kate are set to wrap-up their trip to Boston — but the reason for their visit is being overshadowed by controversy back home and by the new trailer for Harry and Meghan’s docuseries. @KeirSimmons shares the latest.
1:09 PM ∙ Dec 2, 2022
56Likes12Retweets

It wasn’t just puffy morning shows either. Ostensibly hard news programs like NBC Nightly News ran two different segments on the Royal visits. ABC World News Tonight ran two segments, and CBS Evening News ran three. None of the network evening news shows have mentioned the California academic strike at all.

Twitter avatar for @NBCNightlyNews
NBC Nightly News with Lester Holt @NBCNightlyNews
Prince William and President Biden met today in Boston for the first time since Queen Elizabeth’s funeral. The meeting comes after the fallout from Buckingham Palace’s racism controversy. @KeirSimmons has the latest royal updates.
12:45 AM ∙ Dec 3, 2022
56Likes8Retweets
Twitter avatar for @CBSEveningNews
CBS Evening News @CBSEveningNews
ROYAL VISIT: William and Kate, the Prince and Princess of Wales, arrived in Boston to kick off their three-day trip to the U.S., their first visit to the U.S. in eight years.
11:49 PM ∙ Nov 30, 2022
67Likes23Retweets
Twitter avatar for @CBSEveningNews
CBS Evening News @CBSEveningNews
Prince William has given out the second annual Earthshot prize for entrepreneurs and innovators who are working to save the planet. The future king awarded five prizes worth more than a million dollars each to eco innovators trying to combat the climate crisis.
12:01 AM ∙ Dec 6, 2022
18Likes8Retweets
Twitter avatar for @ABCWorldNews
World News Tonight @ABCWorldNews
ROYAL VISIT BOSTON: Prince William and Princess Catherine’s visit to the U.S. has been overshadowed in part by controversy after the trailer for Harry and Meghan’s docuseries was released. @TrevorLAult has more. abcn.ws/3P1gTZh
3:30 AM ∙ Dec 2, 2022
15Likes5Retweets

The strike, which is now entering its 22nd day, has seen over 48,000 teaching assistants, researchers, postdoctoral scholars and other university workers demanding minimum living wages amidst a crushing California housing crisis. In a recent union survey, according to the New York Times, “92 percent of graduate student workers said housing consumed more than a third of their income. For 40 percent of them, it was more than half.” Yesterday, 17 strikers were arrested staging a sit-in in the lobby of the UC president’s office in Sacramento.

ABC News, CBS News, NBC News, and CNN all have a dedicated “royal expert,” “royal correspondent,” or “royal commentator”. (NBC News’s Keir Simmons has a slightly more respectable title of “chief international correspondent,” but he appears to just fly around following Prince William and Princess Kate.)  ABC, CBS, and CNN do not have a “labor expert” or a dedicated labor reporter of any kind. NBC News does, Eli M. Rosenberg, but he has not covered the University of California academic strike. 

None of the Sunday morning talk shows, NBC News’s Meet the Press, CBS News’s Face The Nation, ABC News’s This Week, or CNN’s State of the Union—which set the agenda for what people in Washington are supposed to care about that week—have covered the California labor strike since it began in November 14. CNN, which has over 500 hours of news to fill in the three weeks since the strike began, hasn't done a single segment on it. 

The largest academic strike in U.S. history is simply a non-story to TV news outlets. 

As I mentioned in my previous article on the TV news blackout on the California academic workers strike, labor is simply not seen as mainstream news. Despite record labor actions affecting millions throughout the U.S., the topic of labor and unionization is still relegated to a niche news topic—that is, until it affects “supply chains'' or threatens Democrats' midterm prospects. Then it rises to the level of a major news story, but only as a means for mainstream TV outlets to fearmonger about the negative consequences of strikes and demand Congress make said strike illegal, as evidenced by this mashup of CNN rail strike overage from the Recount’s Steve Morris:  

Twitter avatar for @stevemorris__
Steve Morris @stevemorris__
Rail workers: A single day of sick leave please CNN's coverage today:
7:43 PM ∙ Nov 29, 2022
19,637Likes4,174Retweets

Meanwhile, personal branding Netflix series, charity balls, and other vacuous day-to-day activities of the late Queen Elizabeth’s male progeny are given wall-to-wall coverage, journalistic resources, and attention. Despite a rise in labor activity over the past year, polls show most Americans don’t think unions are stronger than they were a year ago. One reason this may be is that mainstream TV, unless it’s rallying to make a pending strike illegal, simply ignores mass labor actions throughout the United States. 

The Column is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.

2
Share this post

TV News Covered British Royal Visit 5,668% More Than Largest Academic Strike in U.S. History

thecolumn.substack.com
2 Comments
dunshirearbiter
Dec 14, 2022

Hi Adam, Great work as always!

I don't see a way to contact you directly, but it's important- if you could reach out that would be great. Thank you.

Expand full comment
ReplyCollapse
1 reply by Adam Johnson
1 more comment…
TopNewCommunity

No posts

Ready for more?

© 2023 Adam Johnson
Privacy ∙ Terms ∙ Collection notice
Start WritingGet the app
Substack is the home for great writing