# Samuel Robert Lichter

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**Samuel Robert Lichter** is a professor of communication at [George Mason University](/source/George_Mason_University),[1] where he directs the [Center for Media and Public Affairs](/source/Center_for_Media_and_Public_Affairs), which conducts scientific studies of the news and entertainment media, and formerly directed the [Statistical Assessment Service](/source/Statistical_Assessment_Service) (STATS), which works to improve the quality of statistical and scientific information in the news.

## Academia

Lichter has taught political science at [Princeton](/source/Princeton_University), [Georgetown](/source/Georgetown_University), and [George Washington](/source/George_Washington_University) universities, and he was a research faculty member at [Yale University](/source/Yale_University) and [Columbia University](/source/Columbia_University). He was also a [National Endowment for the Humanities](/source/National_Endowment_for_the_Humanities) Fellow at [Smith College](/source/Smith_College) and held the [DeWitt Wallace](/source/DeWitt_Wallace) Chair in Mass Communications at the [American Enterprise Institute](/source/American_Enterprise_Institute). He received his Ph.D. in Government from [Harvard University](/source/Harvard_University) and his B.A., summa cum laude, from the [University of Minnesota](/source/University_of_Minnesota).[1]

## Scholarly work

Lichter has authored or co-authored fourteen books and over a hundred scholarly articles and monographs on the news and entertainment media. His best-known work, *[The Media Elite](/source/The_Media_Elite),* (written with Stanley Rothman and Linda Lichter, and funded by conservative foundations) argued that journalists, on average, held more [liberal](/source/Liberalism) political views than the general public, and that their backgrounds and outlooks affect their coverage of the news. This claim was extended by conservative pundits as evidence for a [liberal bias](/source/Liberal_bias) in the media. It also provoked widespread debate among journalists and their critics. *The Media Elite* was based on interviews with major media journalists and [content analysis](/source/Content_analysis) of their work.

Lichter and his co-authors have also written on the social and political perspectives of popular culture, in books such as *Prime Time* and *Watching America,* as well as on news coverage of science and health issues, in *Environmental Cancer—A Political Disease* and *It Ain't Necessarily So.* His most recent books (written with Stephen Farnsworth) are *The Nightly News Nightmare: Television Coverage of Presidential Elections* (2006, 2nd ed.); and *The Mediated Presidency: Television News and Presidential Governance* (2005). These works use content analysis to examine the media's coverage of government and election campaigns.

In 1986 Lichter and his late ex-wife, sociologist Linda Lichter, established the [Center for Media and Public Affairs](/source/Center_for_Media_and_Public_Affairs) (CMPA), a non-profit organization that sought to influence public debate on the media by publishing frequent studies of media coverage using the social scientific tool of [content analysis](/source/Content_analysis). This was the first time this type of academic research was used on a regular and systematic basis to affect the general public's view of the media. Since then other groups have followed suit, including the [Annenberg School for Communication](/source/Annenberg_School_for_Communication_at_the_University_of_Pennsylvania) and the [Pew Foundation](/source/Pew_Foundation)'s [Project for Excellence in Journalism](/source/Project_for_Excellence_in_Journalism). In 2004 the CMPA became affiliated with the [George Mason University](/source/George_Mason_University).

## Bibliography

### Journal articles

- Stanley Rothman; Neil Nevitte & S. Robert Lichter (March 2005). "Politics and Professional Advancement". *Academic Questions*. **18** (2): 71–84. [doi](/source/Doi_(identifier)):[10.1007/s12129-005-1008-y](https://doi.org/10.1007%2Fs12129-005-1008-y). [S2CID](/source/S2CID_(identifier)) [143263315](https://api.semanticscholar.org/CorpusID:143263315). Reprinted on the occasion of the award by the [National Association of Scholars](/source/National_Association_of_Scholars) of the [Sidney Hook Memorial Award](https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Sidney_Hook_Memorial_Award&action=edit&redlink=1) to [Stanley Rothman](https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Stanley_Rothman&action=edit&redlink=1), 22 May 2004. Originally published online in [*The Forum*](https://web.archive.org/web/20120111103650/http://www.bepress.com/forum/vol3/iss1/art2/) (subscription required).

## References

1. ^ [***a***](#cite_ref-GMU_1-0) [***b***](#cite_ref-GMU_1-1) ["Samuel Robert Lichter"](https://communication.gmu.edu/people/slichter). *George Mason University*. Retrieved 13 April 2021.

## External links

- [Appearances](https://www.c-span.org/person/?3555) on [C-SPAN](/source/C-SPAN)

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