Media Bias Research Paper

Words: 684
Pages: 3

To be bias, a partiality must exist within an issue or situation preventing an objective consideration, which has led to a one-sided decision. Person’s with a biased view can be prejudice towards others with opposing views, and most oftenly treat such individuals unfairly. For example, if a higher ranking worker was to fire an employee because of a sports team he/she likes, then he/she would be a victim of prejudice filtered through biased views. People often avoid any discussion with others of a different view to prevent an argumentative outcome. Biased people cast others with different beliefs in a negative light of inferiority. Everyone has favoritism towards a believe or side they like, but may negatively be acted against if it opposes anyone else’s beliefs. Biased perspectives push …show more content…
To avoid confrontations involving a different aspect of an issue, biased people will completely ignore others who want to argue upon the issue at hand. Media bias has greatly increased with the skyrocketing use of technology. Everything news channel’s present to the public should be objective and incorporate both sides of a story, but it is not. News channels decide what goes into a story and what is left out. Having the power to sway views on many topics through the exclusion of key information increases the power a news channel has over the people watching it. Media networks handpick information presented to the public, based off of a one-sided view, which becomes very persuasive when explaining what has supposedly happened. News channels get statistical information from sources that have the same aspect on current events. Even though a news channel presents it is supported by experts, it is most likely because those experts have the same views. Many employees of a biased media network will say opposing networks are “beneath talking to me” because they think differently. News channels should