Word Count 336
I reviewed the news coverage on the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter Day Saints recent child custody cases in Texas.
News Paper
The article in USA Today, “FLDS Children moved to sports arena; Texas
separates those 5 and older from sect mothers,” was fairly short. It only stating the
important facts of the children and wives conditions. The source who was quoted was
Marleigh Meisner a spokeswoman for Texas Child Protective Services. She is the only
person who is quoted in this article. Though the article does mentions that the attorney for
the FLDS church, Gerald Goldstein, “did not return a call seeking comment,” (USA
Today, William M. Welch). There were no photos or charts used in this article.
Television
The television broadcast on the children and wives in child custody was also very
short, 2 minutes and 3 seconds. There were a total of four sources quoted, three men, and
one woman. Two of the men were fundamentalist Mormons, the third man was an
attorney, and the one woman was a current guardian of some of the children in custody.
The details on television are much more intricate because the use of the many graphics. It
also showed the Mormons speaking on their views, and their gigantic houses, and their
bus loads of families.
http://cbsnews.com Website
The online coverage of the custody issue was extremely long compared to both the
newspaper and television. The story is about 40+ pages when it is printed out. The story
has many sources, and they are sources most people would take their word for. For
example the website quoted The Los Angeles Times, The Salt Lake Tribune, and etc. The
story was more like a print coverage. Because it was very informative and used sources,
it was not like the broadcast because there were not photos used at all. It was also very
different from both because at the end it allowed comments of random people. The
comments were both for and against the courts decisions.
http://messengerandadvocate.wordpress.com/2008/04/18/texas-judge-rules-all-416-must-remain-in-state-custody/