I don't where I've heard it, but somebody once said polls are done by media outlets in order to make the news rather than report it. In other words, they use a poll as a way to report on a topic they want to write about, but in which significant news is not being made. I'm not sure I've ever seen a more obvious case than this:
The AP-mtvU survey found that overall, eight in 10 college students say they feel stress, including four in 10 who say it affects them often. The most often mentioned causes include school, money and relationships. [formatting added]
But of course, the reporter (AP itself?) wasn't really interested in the biggest factors of college stress or how students cope with it. The poll was merely a pivot for a pre-conceived story. Silly me, I always thought newsmakers were people journalists reported on. Turns out "newsmakers" actually work in newsrooms...
UPDATE: Professional journalists ask, "Have you stopped beating your wife?". The descriptor "rabid partisans" seems to apply more and more. On days like this, I start fantasizing about GEN Honore as WH Press Secretary.
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