Numbers, Facts and Trends Shaping Your World

Islamic Issues Ignite the Blogosphere

PEJ New Media Index August 16-20, 2010

For the second week in a row, the debate over a planned mosque near the World Trade Center site raged in the blogosphere. But this time, a different set of voices dominated that conversation.

From August 16-20, 14% of the news links on blogs were about the mosque controversy, according to the New Media Index from the Pew Research Center’s Project for Excellence in Journalism.

One week earlier, the same topic was the second biggest story in the blogosphere (18% of the links), and in that case, the commentary was dominated by anti-mosque voices.

But last week, bloggers in support of the planned mosque rose up. Most responded to a column by Charles Krauthammer who argued that the center should be located elsewhere for “reasons of common decency and respect for the sacred.” These bloggers disagreed and felt cultural sensitivity is trumped by the legal right of Muslims.

“Rights are not symbolic abstractions,” wrote Maha on Mahablog. “A right that cannot be exercised is not a right. Krauthammer and others on the Right keep saying they don’t dispute the right to build the Islamic Center on private property, but are saying the Center shouldn’t be built.”

An anonymous blogger on MyBrainItches seconded that sentiment “We allow you the right to practice your religion and will allow it to you under the laws of our land.  That’s who we are and we need to show a higher class of citizenship.”

Other bloggers attacked the underlying premise of Krauthammer’s article: that the cultural center would be too close to Ground Zero for comfort.

 “Those Americans who oppose the plans to build an Islamic community center at 45-51 Park Place seem to tie all Muslims to the September 11th attacks,” Hector Luis Alamo, Jr. wrote at Young Observers.  “Their fear and misunderstanding of the issue was exemplified by the columnist for The Washington Post Charles Krauthammer when he likened the proposal of an Islamic community center in Lower Manhattan to a Japanese cultural center at Pearl Harbor, a German cultural center at Treblinka, or even a “commercial tower over Gettysburg.”

One of the few anti-mosque bloggers who commented last week questioned the wisdom of protecting all types of religious establishment under the law.

“Under the First Amendment defense, should not more radical Islamic views be protected as well?” Brian Castner wrote on the Buffalo Repat blog at WNYmedia.net. “I don’t even mean Al Qaeda, or a front for Hamas providing materiel support (both illegal). I just mean the occasional fiery speech supporting strict Sharia law. Where is the line? If less than moderate Muslims preaching at this site gives you pause, then we are not so far apart.”

The mosque debate also resonated on YouTube last week where the third most-viewed video featured MSNBC host Keith Olbermann arguing for keeping the project near Ground Zero.

[1]

One area of similarity between the social and mainstream media was an analysis of the semantics of the dispute. Some of the newspaper and network news reporting, in particular, was devoted to examining the mosque’s proximity to the World Trade Center site and questioning whether the term “Ground Zero mosque” was accurate. That was also a thread picked up by a significant number of bloggers last week. Hector Luis Alamo declared, for instance, “Bigotry and Islamophobia are bolstering the opposition to the planned Park51 center, misleading described as the “Ground Zero mosque” by much of the media.” *

Obama’s Religion

If some bloggers saw the furor over the construction of the Park 51 center as evidence of Islamophobia  in the U.S., the news that  growing numbers of Americans believe President Obama is a Muslim also stoked some anger.

Tied for the No. 2 spot on blogs (13% of the links) was a poll about President Obama’s religious orientation by the Pew Research Center (Note: PEJ is a project of the Pew Research Center). Taken before President Obama’s August 15 comments endorsing religious freedom-the poll found the percentage of Americans who think Obama is a Muslim had grown to 18%, up from 11% in March 2009. 

Most bloggers, linking to an August 19 Washington Post story about the poll, had harsh words for the nearly one-fifth of the public who wrongly indentified the president’s religion. Some criticized conservative operatives, the media and pollsters for perpetuating the misperception about Obama’s religion.

“The poll results belie the assumption that Americans consistently support religious freedom and equality,” Darren Lenard Hutchinson wrote at Dissenting Justice. “Instead, significant numbers of Americans harbor biases against Muslims (including a growing number who wrongfully believe Obama himself is a Muslim).”

One blogger saw a connection between the president’s decline in popularity and the public’s skepticism of his true faith. “So the less popular Obama is generally, the more likely he is to be perceived as a Muslim?” asked Ann Althouse. “Is this fair to Obama? Is this fair to Muslims?”

Still others pointed to the Reverend Jeremiah Wright controversy to make the point that Obama’s political detractors will use any questions about his religious identification against him. “My guess is that the overwhelming majority of those people who think President Obama is Muslim are people who simply don’t like his politics, and who also think that Muslims as a whole are evil (see the connection?),” wrote blogger HSCFREE. “I would also guess that some of these same people were lapping up the Rev. Wright stories. Does that make Rev. Wright, adored for his political detriment to Obama, a secret Muslim too?”

KayStreet607 at Fifth Column argued that a slow August news cycle had blown this story out of proportion.

“Because it’s ‘let’s be stupid because Congress is on recess and we like jumping over a cliff’ month, the story actually gets some traction, because it was reported by the ever-vigilant Washington Post” the blogger quipped. “That the question was polled at all lends legitimacy to it. That it was reported simply offers the cynical and the stupid cover to believe what is just simply not true, not relevant, and not an issue.”

A small minority of bloggers weren’t so sure that some Americans were mistaken about identifying Obama as a follower of Islam.

“Now, why in the world would they come up with such an idea?” Debra Moore asked on Exposing Liberal Lies. “Could it be the frequent pandering to those in the Arab world, the bow of submission to the Saudi king, the hatred of Israel, the decision to order NASA to concentrate on building up Muslims, the support for the Ground Zero mosque? My, the list goes on and on. Actions do certainly speak louder than words.”

Twitter

On Twitter last week an article sounding the death knell for the World Wide Web generated the most attention by far.

In the August 17 cover story on Wired.com, editor-in-chief Chris Anderson and writer Michael Wolff proclaim “The Web Is Dead.”  The story, which garnered 34% of all links, tracks how other internet-based applications such as video and peer-to-peer networks have been growing at the expense of the web. Anderson and Wolff predict that Internet entrepreneurs will increasingly abandon the web for the app market, “simpler, sleeker services…” that “are less about searching and more about getting.”

Second, at 7% was a Mashable report on two Twitter malfunctions-lists and tweet counts-that affected some users on August 19.

Third, at 7% of links, was a BBC story on a study of media usage that suggested the average British citizen spends half of his or her waking hours using media and communications, often multi-tasking on several devices.

Twitter users also delighted in another Wired.com post, about Alex Eyalar’s Lego re-creation of a zero-gravity scene from the film Inception (No. 4 with 6%). “So a LEGO nerd has recreated Inception. http://bit.ly/bh8F4p Kick me if I’m dreaming this,” Wired Tweeted on August 19.

At fifth, with 6% of all links, was an MSNBC.com story reporting the withdrawal from Iraq of the last full brigade of U.S. combat forces as the troops entered neighboring Kuwait.

YouTube

Keith Olbermann’s August 16 Special Commentary in which he attacked critics of the mosque near Ground Zero was the third most-viewed news video on YouTube last week.

But it was an off-color embarrassment on the set of a TV newscast in Britain that ended up as the No. 2 and No. 4 videos last week.

Tomasz Schafernaker, a weather forecaster, was caught making a rude gesture toward news presenter Simon McCoy during an August 17 BBC national news broadcast.

In a tongue-in-cheek reference to Schafernaker, McCoy said: “Now we’ll have the weather forecast in just a minute. Of course it will be 100%  accurate and provide you with all the details you could possibly want.”

In response Schafernaker extended his middle finger as the shot switched to the weatherman. Once he realized he was on air, Schafernaker recoiled, bringing his fingers over his mouth. 

According to a report on the BBC website the following day, he later apologized, saying: “I am very sorry for any offence that might have been caused by my actions.”

This was not Schafernaker’s first gaffe on BBC. In 2007, according to the same article, he called the British Western Isles and the West Highlands “nowheresville” during a weather forecast and “was also reduced to hysterics by an unfortunate rude slip of the tongue while trying to say ‘muddy site’ during a BBC Radio 4 forecast last year.&quot

Most Viewed News & Politics Videos on YouTube
For the Week of July 31-August 6, 2010

1. Campaign ad for José Serra, a Brazilian presidential candidate 

2. BBC weather anchor caught making rude gesture on air   

3. Keith Olbermann’s Special Commentary on the Park 51 Islamic cultural center project

4. Another version of  BBC weather anchor caught making rude gesture on air (taken down due to copyright claims)   

5. Russia Today report on an accident at an off-road truck race in California that killed 8

Note: A number of articles that appeared among the most-linked to stories on Icerocket were removed from the blog sample this week because of evidence of spamming. This included three stories on the floods in Pakistan and an op-ed in support of Paul Wolfowitz’s leadership at the World Bank. In all cases, the blog posts linking to the story were identical and in most cases were posted on previously inactive blogs.


The New Media Index is a weekly report that captures the leading commentary of blogs and social media sites focused on news and compares those subjects to that of the mainstream press.

PEJ’s New Media Index is a companion to its weekly News Coverage Index. Blogs and other new media are an important part of creating today’s news information narrative and in shaping the way Americans interact with the news. The expansion of online blogs and other social media sites has allowed news-consumers and others outside the mainstream press to have more of a role in agenda setting, dissemination and interpretation. PEJ aims to find out what subjects in the national news the online sites focus on, and how that compared with the narrative in the traditional press.

A prominent Web tracking site Icerocket, which monitors millions of blogs, uses the links to articles embedded on these sites as a proxy for determining what these subjects are. Using this tracking process as a base, PEJ staff compiles the lists of links weekday each day. They capture the top five linked-to stories on each list (25 stories each week), and reads, watches or listens to these posts and conducts a content analysis of their subject matter, just as it does for the mainstream press in its weekly News Coverage Index. It follows the same coding methodology as that of the NCI. Note: When the NMI was launched in January 2009, another web-tracking site Technorati was similarly monitoring blogs and social media. PEJ originally captured both Technorati’s and Icerocket’s daily aggregation. In recent months, though, this component of Technorati’s site has been down with no indication of when it might resume. 

The priorities of the bloggers are measured in terms of percentage of links. Each time a news blog or social media Web page adds a link to its site directing its readers to a news story, it suggests that the author of the blog places at least some importance on the content of that article. The user may or may not agree with the contents of the article, but they feel it is important enough to draw the reader’s attention to it. PEJ measures the topics that are of most interest to bloggers by compiling the quantitative information on links and analyzing the results.

For the examination of the links from Twitter, PEJ staff monitored the tracking site Tweetmeme. Similar to Icerocket and Technorati, Tweetmeme measures the number of times a link to a particular story or blog post is tweeted and retweeted. Then, as we do with Technorati and Icerocket, PEJ captured the five most popular linked-to pages each weekday under the heading of “news” as determined by Tweetmeme’s method of categorization. And as with the other data provided in the NMI, the top stories are determined in terms of percentage of links. (One minor difference is that Tweetmeme offers the top links over the prior 24 hours while the lists used on Technorati and Icerocket offer the top links over the previous 48 hours.)

The Project also tracks the most popular news videos on YouTube each week.  

*For the sake of authenticity, PEJ has a policy of not correcting misspellings or grammatical errors that appear in direct quotes from blog postings.

Note: PEJ’s weekly News Coverage Index includes Sunday newspapers while the New Media Index is Monday through Friday.


[1]

Icon for promotion number 1

Sign up for our weekly newsletter

Fresh data delivery Saturday mornings

Icon for promotion number 1

Sign up for The Briefing

Weekly updates on the world of news & information