Idol Pleasure
Americans seem to love numbers of all kinds. Last year, President Bush hosted “American Idol” winner Taylor Hicks and
the other top-10 finalists in the Oval Office.
Newspapers, including USA Today were quick to report that 63 million votes
had been cast for Hicks in the season finale
— 4 million more than the 59 million
votes Bush received in 2004. (Voters can,
however, cast more than one ballot on
“American Idol.”)
Interactive television polls — although
not scientifically valid — are extremely
popular. Television programs and Internet
sites ranging from contests to news programs
frequently ask audience members
to vote on a question electronically, either
via the Internet, text messages or calls to a
specific telephone number.
While these interactive-television or
Web experiences are popular among viewers
and many receive great media coverage,
they do not constitute genuine research. “They are not polls at all,” says Woolley.
These respondents represent only a narrow
segment of the population and are
in no way randomized. “These are really
just ways to make watching a television
program a more interactive, rather than
passive, experience,” he explains.
Another survey on “The Sopranos,” done in May before the final episode aired, showed that viewers wanted Tony Soprano to survive the end of the series. |
But culture and entertainment do not
lie outside the realm of valid polling. For
instance, PublicMind, in its initial year,
conducted a poll of New Jerseyans and
people throughout the country on their
opinions of the state and of the HBO
hit program “The Sopranos.” The poll
showed that two-thirds of Sopranos viewers
nationally and three-quarters of those
in New Jersey did not believe the show
portrayed Italian-Americans in a negative
way, as some opponents of the show
claimed. Majorities of both groups also felt
the show did not glorify organized crime.
Another survey on “The Sopranos,”
done in May before the final episode aired,
showed that viewers wanted Tony Soprano
to survive the end of the series. Media coverage
of these surveys ranged from local papers
such as The Record and The Star-Ledger to
The New York Times’ Metro Section and
Yahoo!News.
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