NOW

Women in Media Fact Sheet

Women will not be truly equal until we have full and fair representation in the media -– a fact long recognized by the National Organization for Women. Because the media play a central role in informing the public about political, legal, health and other matters, they have the power to affect each and every issue that feminists care about. For instance, we cannot advocate effectively for pay equity, reproductive rights or violence prevention if the media ignore these issues or present them from a limited viewpoint that favors the status quo.

How unequal is the media? Women and people of color are sorely lacking as media owners and high-level executives; they are under-represented in decision-making roles (like news directors) and high-visibility positions (like network anchors); and they make up a small portion of the experts weighing in on the big issues of the day on political talk shows and newspaper op-ed pages.

Just how bad is the situation? Read on...

Diversity Lacking in TV and Radio Ownership


Women Unequal in Media Jobs


Men Dominate Network TV and Cable News


Women Underrepresented in Print News

More Women Needed in Radio Industry


Movies and Primetime TV: Women Missing Behind the Scenes


What Girls and Boys See in Children's TV and Movies


1 Free Press, " Out of The Picture 2007: Minority & Female TV Station Ownership in the United States," October 2007

2 Free Press, "Off The Dial: Female and Minority Radio Station Ownership in the United States," June 2007

3 Institute for Women's Policy Research, "Making the Right Call: Jobs and Diversity in the Communications and Media Sector," August 2006

4 Institute for Women's Policy Research, "Making the Right Call: Jobs and Diversity in the Communications and Media Sector," August 2006

5 Annenberg Public Policy Center of the University of Pennsylvania, "The Glass Ceiling Persists: The 3rd Annual APPC Report on Women Leaders in Communication Companies," December 2003

6 Radio-Television News Directors Association, "2008 Women and Minorities Survey," July/August 2008

7 CBS web site, September 2008

8 Center for Media and Public Affairs, "Media Monitor: 2006 Year in Review," Winter 2007

9 Media Matters for America, "Sunday Shutout: The Lack of Gender & Ethnic Diversity on the Sunday Morning Talk Shows," May 2007

10 Media Matters for America, "Gender and Ethnic Diversity in Prime-Time Cable News," July 2008

11 American Society of Newspaper Editors, "Newsroom Employment Census," April 2008

12 Media Management Center at Northwestern University, "Women in Media 2006," 2006

13 Media Matters for America, "Black and White and Re(a)d All Over: The Conservative Advantage in Syndicated Op-Ed Columns," September 2007

14 Women's eNews, "One by One, Women Count Bylines," December 2005 and Columbia Journalism Review, "Gentlemen's Club," July/August 2005

15 Radio-Television News Directors Association, "2008 Women and Minorities Survey," July/August 2008

16 Mentoring and Inspiring Women in Radio, "2007 Gender Analysis Study," February 2008

17 TALKERS magazine, "Heavy Hundred 2008," 2008

18 Center for the Study of Women in Television and Film at San Diego State University, "The Celluloid Ceiling: Behind-the-Scenes Employment of Women in the Top 250 Films of 2007," January 2008

19 Center for the Study of Women in Television and Film at San Diego State University, "Boxed In: Women On Screen and Behind the Scenes in the 2007-08 Prime-time Season," 2008

20 Geena Davis Institute on Gender in the Media, Annenberg School for Communication, "Gender Stereotypes: An Analysis of Popular Films and TV," 2008

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