The Status of Women in the U.S. Media 2021 is comprised of 109 studies and reports, including original research by the Women’s Media Center and aggregated research from academia, industry and professional groups, labor unions, media watchdogs, newsrooms, and other sources.
” is comprised of 109 studies and reports, including original research by the Women’s Media Center and aggregated research from academia, industry and professional groups, labor unions, media watchdogs, newsrooms, and other sources.At 117 of the nation’s roughly 200 newsrooms affiliated with the Institute for Nonprofit News, 28% of staffers were of color and 69% were women.
Of the top 100 personalities of sports talk shows on the radio, not one was a woman, according to Talkers.Racial diversity was the No. 1 priority of 42% of newsroom leaders responding to a nationwide newsroom survey, following unrest over George Floyd’s murder by a Minneapolis police officer; gender diversity was the No. 1 priority for 18% of them, according to Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism.
At The Washington Post, the average yearly salary for women aged 40 and older was $126,000, while men of the same age earned an average of $127,765, more than 1.5% more than women. Women younger than 40, had average annual earnings of $84,030, 14% less than the $95,890 men their age earned, according to the Washington-Baltimore News Guild.
Whites, who comprised 34.2% of the city’s population, were 58.7% of people featured in Philadelphia Inquirer news articles written by full-time staffers. Whites were 61.3% of featured persons in published stories by staffers, freelancers and the wire services, combined, according to Temple University Klein College of Media and Communication.
Models of color were on the covers of 48.8% of major magazines in 2020, reflecting a roughly 12 percentage-point increase over 2019, according to Fashion Spot. Telemundo and Univision, now owned by Whites, owned most of the largest U.S. news outlets targeting Latinx audiences, according to City University of New York Graduate School of Journalism.
Black females constituted 6.5% of the U.S. population but 3.7% of leads or co-leads in the 100 top- grossing films of the decade ending in 2019, according to the Geena Davis Institute on Gender in Media. A record 8% of family films featured a lead with a disability in 2019, according to the Geena Davis Institute on Gender in the Media.
Of 2020’s 100 films with the highest box office receipts,16% were directed by women, a historic high, according to the Center for the Study of Women in Television & Film. People of color were 19% of 230 executives, division heads, and other senior leaders at Walt Disney Company, AT&T Inc.’s WarnerMedia, Comcast Corp.’s NBCUniversal, ViacomCBS, Sony Pictures and Netflix, according to the Los Angeles Times.
Of 773 characters appearing regularly on traditional broadcast prime-time television shows in 2020-21, 9.1% — or 70 — were lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, or queer. That was a decrease from the previous year’s record high of 10.2%, according to GLAAD. For first time, in 2019, new U.S.–produced live-action TV series with diverse casts outnumbered non- diverse casts, with 71 in the former category and 69 in the latter, according to Parrot Analytics and Creative Artists Agency.
Of artists performing 500 of the top country songs of 2014 through 2018, an average of 16% were women, according to the USC Annenberg Inclusion Institute.
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Status of Women in U.S. Media“The Women’s Media Center Status of Women in U.S. Media Report” is the industry standard on statistics for women in media and is produced and published on regular basis.
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Status of Women in U.S. Media“The Women’s Media Center Status of Women in U.S. Media Report” is the industry standard on statistics for women in media and is produced and published on regular basis.
Read more »
Women’s Media CenterWomen's Media Center (WMC) is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit women's organization in the United States founded in 2005 by writers and activists Jane Fonda, Robin Morgan, and Gloria Steinem. Led by President Julie Burton, WMC's work includes advocacy campaigns, media and leadership training, and the creation of original content.
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Women’s Media CenterWomen's Media Center (WMC) is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit women's organization in the United States founded in 2005 by writers and activists Jane Fonda, Robin Morgan, and Gloria Steinem. Led by President Julie Burton, WMC's work includes advocacy campaigns, media and leadership training, and the creation of original content.
Read more »