Abstract
This mixed-methods study examines how local television news informs a primarily Latino community by analyzing broadcasts recorded during a 2-month span in 2012 in Salinas, California, using cultivation theory. Its findings indicate a substantial focus on crime news stories and a disproportionate identification of Latinos as perpetrators of crime compared to the identification of Latinos as victims of crime. These patterns suggest a connection between local television news representations of Latino identity with perceptions of violence, even in predominantly Latino communities.
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