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  • Report Home
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HOMELESSNESS & HOUSING SECURITY
IN U.S. CULTURE:

HOW POPULAR CULTURE & NEWS DEPICT AN AMERICAN CHALLENGE

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center for media
& social impact
school of communication
american university

September 2019

--NEARLY 90% OF ARTICLES-- ABOUT HOUSING STABILITY FOCUSED EXCLUSIVELY ON ONE OF THE THREE MAIN ISSUES (HOMELESSNESS, AFFORDABLE HOUSING, OR GENTRIFICATION).

--EVERY-- HOMELESS CHARACTER THAT WAS DEPICTED WERE SERIES REGULARS OR RECURRING CHARACTERS, AND --ALL BUT ONE-- OF THEM HAD MORE THAN TEN SPEAKING LINES.

MORE THAN --80%-- OF THE HOMELESS CHARACTERS WERE ONE- EPISODE ONLY CHARACTERS, AND --MORE THAN HALF-- OF THEM HAD LESS THAN 10 SPEAKING LINES.

WHILE MORE THAN --40%-- OF PEOPLE EXPERIENCING HOMELESSNESS IN THE U.S. ARE BLACK, AND --39%-- ARE WOMEN, THE SHOWRUNNERS WHO PRODUCED THE “MOST WATCHED” TV STORIES OF HOMELESSNESS WERE DISPROPORTIONATELY
WHITE --(87%)-- AND MALE --(76.1%)--.

HOMELESSNESS AND OTHER --HOUSING STABILITY RELATED ISSUES GARNERED LESS THAN 0.002% OF ATTENTION-- ON THE NEWS AGENDA IN 2018.

Table of Contents

  • Overview
  • Methodology
  • Key Findings: Top-Level Highlights
    • Part 1: Top Popular Culture
    • Part 2: Topic-Based Popular Culture
    • Part 3: News Coverage

About the Center for Media & Social Impact (CMSI)

The Center for Media & Social Impact (CMSI), based at American University’s School of Communication in Washington, D.C., is an innovation lab and research center that creates, studies, and showcases media for social impact. Focusing on independent, documentary and public media, the Center bridges boundaries between scholars, producers and communication practitioners across media production, media impact, public policy, and audience engagement. The Center produces resources for the field and academic research; convenes conferences and events; and works collaboratively to understand and design media that matter.

About the Report

This report was prepared and written by a team at the Center for Media & Social Impact. CMSI director Caty Borum Chattoo served as principal investigator. The report was written by David Conrad, CMSI postdoctoral researcher, and Lori Young, PhD candidate at the University of Pennsylvania’s Annenberg School for Communication, with the tremendous support of three American University (AU) School of Communication researchers: Aras Coskuntuncel, PhD candidate, Sarah Huckins, a graduate student, and Samantha Dols, a PhD candidate. This work was facilitated by the work and support of Varsha Ramani, CMSI communications and program manager. This work was funded by a grant from the Funders for Housing and Opportunity.

Read The Report
Homelessness & Housing Security in U.S. Culture: How Popular Culture & News Depicts an American Challenge

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Overview

Table of Contents

  • Overview
  • Methodology
  • Key Findings: Top-Level Highlights
    • Part 1: Top Popular Culture
    • Part 2: Topic-Based Popular Culture
    • Part 3: News Coverage
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