Study: News crews at more than 20 percent of TV stations were attacked last year

Source: The Hill | April 28, 2021 | Thomas Moore

More than one in five U.S. television newsrooms reported that their journalists were violently attacked last year and even more stations in larger markets reported similar incidents, according to a study conducted by the Radio Television Digital News Association (RTDNA) and the Newhouse School at Syracuse University.

Some 20.5 percent of TV newsroom leaders surveyed said their staff had been attacked last year while 39 percent in top-25 markets reported similar incidents. 

“Among other terrible things, 2020 showed us that far too often journalists were subjected to harassment, threats and assaults merely for doing their constitutionally protected duty,” said RTDNA’s executive director Dan Shelley.

The Western US was the most dangerous region for TV reporters who were attacked regardless of whether they worked for a CBS, NBC, ABC or Fox affiliated station.

The RTDNA and Newhouse has surveyed newsrooms annually about the state of the industry since 1972. However, after several years of watching attacks on journalists increase, the group decided last year to also ask about the violence experienced by news crews.

The RTDNA study, conducted in the fourth quarter of 2020, polled newsroom leaders at 1,762 operating, non-satellite television stations and through a random sample of 3,379 radio stations.

Many of last year’s attacks, the study found, were related to the protests or civil unrest.

“Almost half of the attacks were against crews covering what news directors described as riots, protests and civil unrest,” said the study. “Security was beefed up at stations and fences, locks and gates installed. One-person crews became two-person; two-person crews became three … with the third person frequently a station manager or, more commonly, a security guard.”

Incidents included TV crews being surrounded and threatened during civil unrest, being hit with pepper spray during protests, being shoved, spit on, and hit with water bottles. 

At least one anchor was hit by a rock while other protestors targeted news employees with lasers, tear gas and physical assault. Though some attacks at protests were made by police, most, the study said, involved protestors. 

In response to the attacks, the survey found, TV stations have hired professional security, reduced the number of reporters working by themselves, established 10-minute check-ins, and in some cases asked their news crews not to wear station logos while working in the field.

Radio journalists and stations faced far less violence than their television counterparts, the study said, with 13.8 percent of news directors and general managers at radio stations in major markets reporting attacks on their employees. 

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