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Subject: AEJ 05 FullertJ CTM Learning to Hate Americans in Singapore
From: Elliott Parker <[log in to unmask]>
Reply-To:AEJMC Conference Papers <[log in to unmask]>
Date:Fri, 3 Feb 2006 08:34:07 -0500
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This paper was presented at the Association for Education in Journalism and
Mass Communication in San Antonio, Texas August 2005.
         If you have questions about this paper, please contact the author
directly. If you have questions about the archives, email
rakyat [ at ] eparker.org. For an explanation of the subject line, 
send email to
[log in to unmask] with just the four words, "get help info aejmc," in the
body (drop the "").

(Jan 2006)
Thank you.
Elliott Parker
====================================================================

Learning to Hate Americans in Singapore:
A Test of the DeFleur & DeFleur's Master Theory
of Effects of Mass Communicated Entertainment

Jami A. Fullerton, Ph.D.
Associate Professor of Advertising
School of Journalism and Broadcasting
Oklahoma State University
700 N. Greenwood Ave.
Tulsa, Oklahoma USA  74106
ph. 918/594-8579
fax: 918/594-8281
e-mail:  [log in to unmask]


Matthew Hamilton
Assistant Professor
		Oklahoma City University
2501 N. Blackwelder
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma  USA 73106
ph. 405/521-5326
fax 405/521-5928
e-mail:  [log in to unmask]



Learning to Hate Americans in Singapore:
A Test of DeFleur & DeFleur's Master Theory
of Effects of Mass Communicated Entertainment
Abstract

This study investigates the relationship between attitudes toward 
Americans and exposure to U.S.-produced entertainment media among a 
sample of 328 Singaporean college students.  While overall attitudes 
toward Americans are negative, findings reveal a significant positive 
relationship between attitude toward Americans and using 
U.S.-produced media.  This finding contradicts DeFleur and DeFleur's 
Master Theory of Effects of Mass Communicated Entertainment and 
suggests that American popular culture may be a positive factor in 
views toward Americans worldwide.
Learning to Hate Americans in Singapore:
A Test of DeFleur & DeFleur's Master Theory
of Effects of Mass Communicated Entertainment

Since the 9/11 attacks, Americans, led by President George W. Bush, 
have been appropriately asking themselves, "Why do they hate us?" 
(Bush, 2001). In answering this question, Americans are not only 
attempting to understand the motives behind the bombing of the World 
Trade Center and the Pentagon, but more broadly, the fundamental 
causes of negative attitudes toward America and Americans found 
around the world. The question remains unanswered in 2005, as attacks 
against American interests overseas continue and large-scale 
international polls reveal rising levels of anti-Americanism among 
citizens of other countries (Pew, 2004, Pew, 2002; Stokes, 
2004).  Many have suggested reasons for the hatred. Most often cited 
is U.S. domination of world affairs, (Grimm, 2003) lack of cultural 
sensitivity, (Reinhard, 2003; Love 2003) and U.S. foreign policy in 
the Middle East (Telhami, 2003, Rubin, 2002).
Mass communication scholars Melvin and Margaret DeFleur have offered 
an answer to the "Why do they hate us?" question in Learning to Hate 
Americans: How U.S. Media Shape Negative Attitudes Among Teenagers in 
Twelve Countries (2003). According to DeFleur and DeFleur, the hatred 
is a result of little if any contact with Americans combined with an 
abundant consumption of U.S. films, music and television programming 
around the world (Pop Anti-Americanism, 2003).
DeFleur and DeFleur report the findings of a survey that they 
conducted among teenagers in twelve countries, which revealed overall 
negative views of Americans.  According to the authors, the negative 
views are driven by beliefs that Americans are criminal, violent and 
sexually immoral.  DeFleur and DeFleur note that these same qualities 
are often the subject of Hollywood produced films and television 
consumed in abundance by young people around the world.  Through an 
analysis of the survey data, the authors suggest a link between 
negative attitudes toward Americans and exposure to U.S.-produced 
entertainment media.  Melvin DeFleur called this finding 
"disturbing," and surmised that  "pop-culture rather than foreign 
policy is the true culprit of anti-Americanism" (Pop Anti-Americanism, 2003).
Theoretical Framework
At the end of their book, DeFleur and DeFleur offer a Master Theory 
of Effects of Mass Communicated Entertainment based on findings from 
their survey, and conclude that young people learn to hate Americans 
by watching American movies and television programs.  The notion that 
the media create "pictures in our heads" about "the world outside" 
with which we have little or no experience is one of the early 
phenomena discussed in mass communication research, dating back to 
Walter Lippman's Public Opinion in 1922. Several theories address 
this concept, which recognizes that in the absence of other 
experiences, people rely on images and stories from the mass media to 
form their concepts of reality.  For example, The Social Construction 
of Reality theory generally explains how people construct ideas about 
their world from whatever process of communication is available to 
them (Lowery & DeFleur, 1995).  And the Meaning Theory of Media 
Portrayals shows how mass media can become a source of meaning for 
aspects of reality with which people have little experience (Lowery & 
DeFleur, 1995).  Gerbner's (1998) Cultivation Analysis suggests that 
people, who over time are exposed to a particular view of the world 
on television, begin to accept that world as reality.  In today's 
global society, for those who have never seen America or known an 
American personally, their beliefs about America and Americans may 
come from depictions that they see in US-produced movies and 
television, which are consumed in abundance throughout the world.
This study attempts to test media effects theories, specifically 
DeFleur and DeFleur's Master Theory of Effects of Mass Communicated 
Entertainment, by investigating the relationship between attitudes 
toward America and exposure to U.S.-produced media among a sample of 
college students in Singapore.
Background
Singapore
Singapore is a tiny, island nation located in Southeast Asia between 
Malaysia and Indonesia – two of the world's largest Muslim 
countries.  Singapore is about three times the size of Washington DC 
with a population of 4.4 million people. The multi-racial society is 
divided into three main segments: Chinese (76.7%), Malay (14%), 
Indian (7.9%) and other (1.4%).  English is recognized at the common 
language for all Singaporeans. Several religions are practiced in 
Singapore.  These include Buddhism (43%), Islam (15%), Christianity 
(15%), Taoism (9%), Hinduism (4%), Sikhism (2%), and Confucianism 
(2%).  Because Singapore is located in the diverse region of 
Southeast Asia, the government encourages social harmony and racial cohesion.
Singapore is a thriving economic success story in a volatile part of 
the world. However, it is also seen as an authoritarian state that 
limits free speech and political choice.  As it has worked to shape 
its nation's collective mind, the Singapore government has 
traditionally rejected Western ideals of individualism and liberty, 
while promoting, via government-sponsored propaganda campaigns, Asian 
values such as studiousness, achievement through hard work and 
respect for authority (Yuen, 1999).
Though the Singaporean government discourages Western values, the 
nation of Singapore has enjoyed good relations with the United States 
over the years and has been a strategic military ally (Cohn, 
2002).  Furthermore, Singaporeans are heavily influenced by American 
popular culture, especially Hollywood movies, music and 
television.  According to Kluver and Fu's (2004) Cultural 
Globalization Index, Singapore is the most globalized country in the 
world, based on its consumption of mass communication products from overseas.
Despite their affinity for American entertainment, many younger 
Singaporeans' attitudes toward Americans are worsening.  Some 
Singaporean college students say that they are irritated with 
American students' ignorance about their country, its location, 
language, racial composition and history.  They are tired of the fact 
that many Americans link Singapore primarily with the Michael Fay 
vandalism incident and subsequent caning (Hodson, 2003).  Others 
complain that Americans often confuse their country with the Chinese 
city of Shanghai, and they are offended that Americans don't realize 
that Singaporeans speak English fluently (R. Gonawala & M.Y. Leong, 
personal communication, March 25, 2002).
Attitude Toward America
	There is no doubt that anti-Americanism is a serious problem in the 
post 9/11 era.  Several international public opinion polls have been 
conducted since 9/11, most notably the Pew Center for the People and 
the Press's Global Attitudes Project. The Global Attitudes Project is 
a series of public opinion surveys that measures the values and 
attitudes of people in countries worldwide (Pew, 2004, Pew, 
2002).  The first project was released in December 2002, with updates 
in March 2003 (before the Iraq war), May 2003 (after the Iraq war) 
and March 2004. The results of the Pew poll show a decline in 
favorable feelings towards the United States. For example, 
favorability ratings of the United States in Great Britain have gone 
from 83% before 9/11, to as low as 48% before the Iraq war, to 58% 
one year later. Most other European countries follow a similar trend, 
but at more negative levels.  According to a recent Pew study, one 
year after the war in Iraq, attitudes toward America are more 
negative and hatred toward the United States, especially in Muslim 
countries, is more intense (Pew, 2004).  The Pew Global Attitude 
Project does not include Singapore in its worldwide survey.
	Other global surveys have produced similar findings. A recent BBC 
poll indicated that public support for the United States in the 
Islamic world is now in single digits ("Dream On, America", 2005). A 
2002 Gallup poll of nine predominantly Muslim countries showed that a 
majority had unfavorable views of the United States and President 
Bush (Schmemann, 2002). Zogby International released similar data 
from eight Arab countries.  The Zogby poll showed attitude toward the 
United States was "wretched" with only one in six Arabs holding 
favorable views of the United States. (Kristof, 2002; Telhami, 2003).
	A closer examination of the polls reveals that the negative feelings 
toward America among people in other countries are largely tied to 
U.S. policy, not the U.S. people or American values (Telhami, 
2003).  The Zogby poll, for example, revealed that when asked about 
"American freedom and democracy," "American education," "American 
products," the "American people," for example, Arabs were 
overwhelmingly positive. However, when asked about American policy 
toward Palestinians, Iraq or the Arab world in general, they were 
harshly negative (Zogby, 2003). Polls in Europe show that people 
dislike American foreign policy, particularly with regard to the war 
in Iraq, but that they separate those feelings from American 
products, people and business, which they do like (Guyon, 
2003).  Other polls in Islamic countries show that while publics 
there embrace American-style democracy and freedom, they reject 
American cultural values (Stokes, 2004).
U.S.-Produced Entertainment Media
U.S.-produced entertainment media is available in abundance 
throughout the world.  The U.S. export of motion pictures, television 
and radio programs, music and music videos in 2002 totaled 
approximately $9.8 billion.  This figure does not include the sale of 
entertainment media by U.S. affiliates of foreign-owned companies 
(such as Universal Studios that was owned in 2002 by Vivendi of 
France), which is projected to be an additional $5 to $6 billion 
(U.S. International Trade Commission, 2004).  Nor does the amount 
adequately reflect total consumption, as it does not include the 
illegal viewing of pirated copies of movies and TV programs, a common 
practice in countries where many U.S. movies are banned by the government.
The depiction of sex and violence in movie content has been well 
documented.  According to the National Television Violence Study 
(1997), 91% of movies and 75% of TV dramas contain violence. Over 
half of music videos and 38% of  "reality" TV shows, two categories 
of programming popular with young people, depict violent acts.  In 
terms of sexual content, a study of the 25 top-grossing video rentals 
of 1998 revealed a total of 105 sexual acts.  Implicit or explicit 
intercourse accounted for 38% of the sexual depictions in movies, the 
vast majority of which involved unmarried partners (Dempsey & 
Reichert, 2001).  Farrar et. al. (2003) found that almost three out 
of four prime time television programs contained some type of sexual 
content – an average of about six sex scenes per hour.
Given these statistics, there is little doubt that U.S. movies and 
television programs are replete with sexuality and violence and that 
they are consumed by millions of people throughout the world.  Many 
have criticized the movie industry for exporting such tantalizing and 
grotesque images of American life to people of other countries and 
cultures (Melloan, 2000).  In a recent New York Times editorial Todd 
G. Buchholz (2004), author and advisor to President George H. Bush, 
tried to appeal to Hollywood's business sense by suggesting that 
toning down the "vulgarity meter" would result in movies having a 
better chance of success in developing countries whose cultural mores 
are more traditional than ours.
Anti-Americanism and Media Exposure
	DeFleur and DeFleur were not the first to cite U.S. entertainment 
media as the cause of anti-Americanism. Mass media and popular 
culture often are accused of creating a distorted image of 
America.  Middle East scholars have noted that in Islamic countries 
U.S. culture is represented by American music, videos and television 
programs, which by their secular nature stand in sharp contrast to 
Islamic teachings (Stokes, 2004).  And at a recent university 
symposium on America's image abroad, a director of the U.S. 
Department of State's Foreign Press Center was quoted as saying that 
most images of America are formed through popular culture, books, 
music and movies rather than coverage of U.S. policy in the foreign 
press (Parrott, 2005).
In an effort to assess the effects of mass media on shaping 
international attitudes toward America and Americans numerous 
researchers have conducted studies similar to the DeFleurs' but on a 
smaller scale. A survey of Japanese middle school students revealed 
no correlation between exposure to Japanese media, which contained 
excessive images of a violent America, and negative attitudes toward 
the American people, though media exposure was related to negative 
attitudes toward the U.S. government. Further, the study found a 
positive correlation between exposure to American movies and 
television programs and Japanese students' attitudes toward America 
and Americans (Inoue, 1999).
Harvard researchers also examined the relationship between exposure 
to U.S. media and anti-Americanism by analyzing 2002 Gallup data from 
nine predominantly Muslim countries (Gentzkow & Sharpiro, 2003). The 
study found that exposure to U.S. newspapers, television and radio 
was not correlated to pro-U.S. attitudes; however, particular sources 
of information about America did make a difference - exposure to CNN 
was associated with pro-American attitudes while exposure to 
Al-Jazeera correlated strongly with anti-American views.  The study 
also reported that those who studied in English tended to be more 
pro-American, but overall levels of education did not make a difference.
Fullerton (2004), in a study of 103 international students studying 
in London, found that while students reported that they did not like 
America, they liked American television, movies and music.  Having 
visited the United States did not make a difference in attitudes 
toward America.  The study did find a significant positive 
relationship between attitude toward Americansand attitude toward 
advertising, which the author said was "an international symbol of 
America and an icon of American culture."
DeFleur & DeFleur Study
This study extends the work of Melvin and Margaret DeFleur as 
reported in their 2003 book, Learning to Hate Americans: How U.S. 
Media Shape Negative Attitudes Among Teenagers in Twelve Countries, 
by applying their instrument and methodology to a sample of college 
students in Singapore, a country that was not among 12 surveyed by 
the DeFleurs.
DeFleur and DeFleur report a direct link between exposure to negative 
depictions of Americans in U.S.-produced entertainment media and 
negative attitudes toward Americans in general among international 
young people.  With the help of friends and colleagues around the 
world, the DeFleurs collected survey data from 1,313 high school 
students in 12 countries -- Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, South Korea, 
Mexico, China, Spain, Taiwan, Lebanon, Pakistan, Nigeria, Italy and 
Argentina.  The students were asked to respond to a 12-item scale 
that measured their attitudes toward Americans, defined as "the daily 
behavior, standards of conduct, and moral codes of ordinary Americans 
and their families" (pg. 41)--not "America, the country."  The 
12-item scale (See Table 1) contained three subscales: 1) Media 
Depictions of Americans 2) Americans as cultural imperialists, and 3) 
Americans have humanitarian values.  The survey also gathered data on 
TV and VCR ownership, movie attendance and other media use, travel to 
the United States and personal characteristics, though analysis of 
these data was not reported in the book.
According to the DeFleurs, the sample was not randomly selected, but 
rather 12 separate convenience samples that were, in their opinion, 
fairly representative of the larger population of teenagers from 
their respective countries in terms of age (median age 17 years), 
gender ratio (51% male, 49% female) and socioeconomic status (middle 
to lower class).
The overall findings of the survey revealed that teens in nearly all 
of the countries responded very negatively toward Americans.  Saudi 
teens topped the list of those with the most negative perceptions of 
Americans, followed by Bahrain, South Korea and Mexico, and slightly 
positive attitude scores were found only in Italy and Argentina. 
Negative characteristics that respondents associated most with 
Americans were that they are dominating, sexually immoral, 
materialistic and violent.
The analysis of Media Depictions of Americans subscale was, according 
to the authors, the "most important in the entire project" (pg. 68) 
as its goal was "to understand the sources of flawed and negative 
images of ordinary Americans."  According to the authors, the 
subscale was designed to show the influence of depictions of 
Americans in media entertainment products and popular culture, such 
as movies and television programming, on beliefs about Americans.  It 
included the following items:  Item 1, "Americans are generally quite 
violent," item 3, "American women are sexually immoral," and item 9 
"Many Americans engage in criminal activities." An internal 
correlation of mean scores from the Media Depictions of Americans 
subscale with the mean scores from the remaining nine questions on 
the questionnaire was positive (+.527) and significant (p<.0001), 
which, according to the authors, "means that the young people studied 
have been significantly influenced by depictions of Americans as 
violent, as criminally inclined and women in the United States as 
sexually immoral" (pg. 72).
In terms of the problems of determining causation from the 
correlations, the authors acknowledge that other influences such as 
domestic and international news, parents, schools and religion may 
also be sources from which young people learn negative 
characteristics about Americans. However, the authors dismiss these 
other possible influences and go on to write:
It is difficult to imagine that such sources would deliberately teach 
young people that American women are sexually immoral, that as human 
beings, Americans are violent and are criminally inclined.  A more 
likely source for such beliefs is what young audiences acquire 
(through incidental learning) from media entertainment products that 
depict ordinary Americans in these ways (pg. 73).

	In the final analysis of the book, the DeFleurs posit a Master 
Theory of the Effects of Mass Communicated Entertainment based on the 
findings of their survey and by incorporating other established mass 
media theories, such as the Social Construction of Reality, to 
explain how U.S.-produced entertainment media may teach young people 
to learn to hate America.  The DeFleurs' master theory suggests that 
U.S. movie and television producers, operating under a capitalist 
system, are driven to create content that will appeal to large young 
audiences, who desire and seek content that "exceeds the boundaries 
of conservative tastes and morality."  This content contains images 
and depictions of American society, lifestyle, families and 
relationships that "exceed conservative norms" and are "seriously 
flawed and misleading."  Through repeated exposure to this content 
over time and in the absence of other information, viewers construct 
from these flawed and inaccurate depictions a reality of America that 
is extremely negative (DeFleur & DeFleur, 2003).
Research Questions
DeFleur and DeFleur's study, as described in their book, did not 
report the type or the amount of exposure that international young 
people have to U.S. media.  These measures could provide additional 
information for understanding the effect of U.S.- produced 
entertainment media on anti-Americanism.  Therefore, to extend the 
DeFleurs' study of international students' attitude toward Americans 
and to test the theory that U.S. entertainment media are a dominant 
source of negative learning about Americans, a new study was 
conducted which partially replicates DeFleur and DeFleur's original 
design.  The new study utilizes DeFleur and DeFleur's 12-item scale 
to measure attitude toward Americans, and also collects additional 
data related to type and amount of exposure to U.S. media.  The 
expanded study was conducted among college students in Singapore in 
March 2004 and attempts to answer the following research questions:
1.	What is the attitude toward Americans among Singaporean college students?
2.	Are there significant differences in attitudes according to 
demographic variables such as gender, race, and religion?
3.	Are students who have visited America more likely to have a 
positive attitude toward Americans than those who have not?
4.	What is the level and type of exposure to U.S.-produced 
entertainment media among Singaporean college students? Does level of 
exposure differ according to demographic variables such as gender, 
race, and religion?
5.	Is there a relationship between exposure to U.S.-produced 
entertainment media and attitude toward Americans?
Methodology
Sample
A sample of 328 students at the Management Development Institute of 
Singapore (MDIS) who were enrolled in advanced diploma (freshman and 
sophomore level) and bachelor's (junior and senior level) degree 
programs participated in the study.  These students were divided 
among 12 different classes visited by the researcher over a period of 
3 weeks in March 2004. MDIS provides accredited degree programs to 
students in collaboration with universities in the United Kingdom, 
United States and Australia.  Although most of the students enrolled 
at MDIS are from Singapore, many students are from China, India, 
Thailand, Vietnam, Indonesia, Malaysia and the Philippines.
Procedure
The students at MDIS completed a pencil and paper questionnaire in 
their respective classrooms located in four different MDIS 
offices/teaching centers in Singapore.  Depending on the local 
professors' preference, the researcher visited the classes either at 
the beginning, conclusion or mid-break time of the sessions.  After 
distributing the questionnaires to the students, the researcher 
promised confidentiality and explained to the students that their 
participation was strictly voluntary.  Students were instructed to 
complete the questionnaires and to submit them to the researcher when 
finished.
Instrument
The 13-page questionnaire first measured attitude toward Americans 
(Alpha=.7596) with twelve 5-point Likert scale questions ranging from 
strongly disagree (1) to strongly agree (5) taken from DeFleur and 
DeFleur (2003). Statistics for the individual questions are reported 
in Table 1.
To measure the respondents' level of U.S. media usage, 10 
fill-in-the-blank questions were included using media categories 
adapted from Willnat, He and Xiaoming (1997).  Students were asked to 
indicate the percentage of time they spent with U.S. media in 
relation to total use of ten media categories: television, radio, 
cinema, video/DVD, music, Internet, newspaper, magazine, books and 
comics.  These questions formed a U.S. media usage scale 
(Alpha=.8105).  Mean scores for media usage times were calculated.
Open-ended questions asked the students to name American movies and 
television programs that they liked and disliked and words that 
described America and Americans. Several demographic questions, 
including age, gender, native language, occupation, ethnicity, 
religious preference and country of citizenship were included at the 
end of the questionnaire.  Students were also asked if they knew 
anyone in the United States, whether or not they had visited the 
United States, and if they would like to visit some day.
Additionally, the questionnaire contained other scales measuring 
attitude toward advertising and questions about likes and dislikes of 
certain commercial messages and U.S. brands; however, these data were 
not analyzed for the purposes of this study.
Data Analysis
To calculate an overall Attitude toward Americans score, negatively 
worded questions were recoded so that all responses scored in the 
same direction.  Media Usage percentages were tabulated and mean 
scores were calculated.  Written responses to all of the open-ended 
questions on the survey were transcribed.  Responses were then 
qualitatively analyzed, grouped, and reported in frequency tables.
Findings
Respondent Profile
Seventy percent of the students who participated were female (n=227), 
and 30% were male (n=95).  Six students did not indicate their 
gender.  Average age of the participants was 23.5 years, with a range 
of 16-43.  Fifty-five percent (n=179) claimed English was their 
native language.  The rest indicated several native languages, 
including Chinese (25.9%, n=85), Malay (7.9%, n=26) and Tamil (4.6%, 
n=15).  Ninety-five percent (n=305) said they spoke English fluently.
Most participants were from Singapore (87.0%, n=275), followed by 
China (6.0%, n=19) and Malaysia (4.1%, n=13). In terms of ethnicity, 
the majority of students were Chinese (70.9%, n=210), followed by 
Indian (11.5%, n=34), Malay (10.5%, n=31), Indonesian (2.0%, n=6) and 
Eurasian (2.0%, n=6).  When compared with Singapore's general 
population, Indians are over-represented in this sample of college 
students, perhaps because many Singaporean Indian families are 
merchants and bankers who value higher education.  Conversely, Malays 
are under-represented in this sample, possibly for the same reason 
--- Malays comprise the working class in Singapore, as well as the 
majority of the poor and unemployed (Levinson, 1998).
The largest group of students who expressed a religious preference 
was Christian (36.8%, n=119), followed by Buddhist (18.0%, n=58), 
Muslim (13.0%, n=42), Hindu (7.4%, n=24), Taoist (3.4%, n=11) and 
Sikh (0.9%, n=3).  Other responses were "not religious" (14.2%, 
n=46), "free thinker" (2.8%, n=9) and 10 students refused to answer. 
Though Christians make up a small percentage (15%) of religious 
Singaporeans in the general population, Christianity is popular among 
young people.  Therefore, Christians are over-represented in this 
sample of college students.  Since MDIS offers degree programs from 
several western universities, including one affiliated with the 
United Methodist church, the school attracts many young Christian Singaporeans.
Asked if they knew anyone in the United States, 70.6% said yes, and 
49.2% said they have regular email contact with friends, co-workers 
or relatives in the United States. One-third (35.4%, n=115) had 
visited the United States and 95.8% (n=299) said they would like to do so.
1.  What is the attitude toward Americans among Singaporean college students?
Overall the students in this study had a slightly negative attitude 
toward Americans (Mean=2.84) Table 1 includes descriptive statistics 
for the12 statements contained in this attitudinal scale.  Students 
agreed most strongly with the statement, "American people like to 
dominate other people" (Mean=3.71) followed by "American people are 
very materialistic" (Mean=3.27).  They disagreed most strongly with 
the statement, "Americans respect people who are not like themselves" 
(Mean=2.76), followed by "American people are very concerned about 
their poor" (Mean=2.78).
	When responding to the question, "What three words would you use to 
describe the United States government?" the top three terms students 
used were "powerful" (42), "arrogant" (33), and "dominating" 
(27).  When responding to the question, "What three words would you 
use to describe the American people?" the top three terms students 
used were "friendly" (112), "open-minded" (50) and "arrogant" (29).
2.  Are there significant differences in attitudes according to 
demographic variables such as gender, race, and religion?
T-tests revealed no significant differences in overall attitude 
toward Americans scores among groups based on gender.  ANOVAs 
revealed no significant differences in overall attitude toward 
Americans scores among groups based on demographic variables such as 
age, ethnicity and religion.
3. 	Are students who have visited America more likely to have a 
positive attitude toward Americans than those who have not?
No differences were found between students who had visited the United 
States and those who had not in terms of their attitude toward 
Americans.  A significant difference was found between students who 
had or had not visited the United States for the statement, "American 
women are sexually immoral" (t=2.514, p=.012).  Students who had 
visited the United States slightly disagreed with the statement 
(Mean=2.96), while those who had not visited the United States agreed 
with the statement (Mean=3.22).
4.  What is the level and type of exposure to U.S.-produced 
entertainment media among Singaporean college students?  Does level 
of exposure differ according to demographic variables such as gender, 
race, and religion?
Students were asked to estimate the amount of U.S. media they consume 
out of their total media consumption in a typical week.  On average, 
about 40 percent (39.44%) of the students' time spent with the media 
was devoted to U.S.-produced content. Findings showed heavy usage of 
U.S. media in some categories, particularly movies, Internet and 
television.  Average amounts were: cinema (71.7%), music (61.8%), 
video/DVD (59.7%), Internet (50.5%), books (46.3%), television 
(40.0%), comics (26.0%), magazine (25.63%), newspaper (8.66%) and radio (7.1%).
Male students (43.92%) consumed significantly more U.S. media than 
did their female counterparts (37.64%) (f=8.35, p=.004).  In terms of 
ethnicity and religion, Malay and Eurasian students (46% 
respectively) spent significantly more time with media than their 
Chinese or Indian peers (f=2.173; p=.020).  Muslim students (48%) 
spent significantly more time with U.S. media than did Christian 
(41.6%), Buddhist (34.5%) Hindu (36.95%) and those who said that they 
were not religious (40%) (f=3.576, p=.0001).
Almost all (90%) of the students said they watch U.S. television 
programs, and about half (56.5%) said they believe these programs 
show characters that are similar to most American people.  However, 
an independent samples t-test found no significant difference between 
students who watched U.S. television programs and those who said they 
did not in terms of their attitudes toward Americans.
The students named dozens of U.S. shows they had seen.  Those most 
often mentioned were American Idol (83), Friends (66) and Survivor 
(32). Seventy-five percent said that there were television programs 
and movies from the United States that they particularly liked.  The 
top three shows students liked were American Idol (29), Friends (17) 
and CSI (13).  Forty-three percent said that there were television 
programs and movies from the United States that they particularly 
disliked.  The top three shows students disliked were The Bachelor 
(31), Fear Factor (14) and Survivor (13).
5.  Is there a relationship between exposures to U.S.-produced 
entertainment media and attitude towards Americans?
A significant, positive correlation was found between attitude toward 
Americans and overall U.S. media use (r=.111, p=.048).  As time spent 
with U.S. media increases, attitude toward Americans increases as well.
Discussion
	This study, which replicates DeFleur and DeFleur's work described in 
their book Learning to Hate Americans: How U.S. Media Shape Negative 
Attitudes Among Teenagers in Twelve Countries (2003), examines the 
impact of exposure to U.S.-produced entertainment media on attitude 
toward Americans held by college students in Singapore.  Findings 
indicate that overall attitudes toward Americans are slightly 
negative.  These negative feelings are driven by beliefs that 
Americans are domineering and materialistic.
In comparing the findings of this study to DeFleur and DeFleur's 
study, overall attitude toward Americans in Singapore is somewhat 
consistent with attitudes in the twelve countries surveyed by the 
DeFleurs.  When the Singapore Attitude Toward Americans score is 
converted to the DeFleurs' scale it becomes a -.41 and fits between 
Pakistan and Nigeria becoming the 10th most negative country, in the 
DeFleurs' ranking (pg. 52).  The strongest negative statement for 
Singaporean students was also the strongest negative statement in the 
DeFleurs' study – "Americans like to dominate other people".  It 
should be noted that the Iraqi war, which began in March 2003, was 
ongoing during the collection of data in Singapore, but had not begun 
when the DeFleur study was conducted in 2002.
According to the students' self-reported information on media 
consumption, Singaporean students spend about 40% of their total time 
with the media watching or reading U.S.-produced content.  Students 
reported that three out of four movies watched are produced in 
Hollywood and about 40% of the television programs watched originate 
in the United States.  Students who said that they watched American 
movies and television programs were statistically no different in 
terms of their attitudes toward Americans than those students who 
said that they did not.
Further, a correlation revealed a positive relationship between time 
spent with U.S. media and attitude toward Americans. These findings 
are contrary to DeFleur and DeFleur's claim that images in Hollywood 
movies and television teach international young people to hate 
America.  They also contradict the position of many U.S. writers, 
pundits and politicians who blame the globalization of American 
culture via the media for anti-Americanism around the world 
(Buchholz, 2004; Melloan, 2000, Parrot, 2005).  The findings reported 
here instead support the research of Inoue (1999) who found a 
positive correlation between attitude toward Americans and U.S. media 
exposure among Japanese middle schoolers and Fullerton (2004) who 
found no difference in attitude toward America between international 
college students who said they watched American television and movies 
and those who did not.
While the correlation in this study does not demonstrate a causal 
relationship between watching U.S. media and liking Americans, it 
does seem to indicate that among the Singaporean sample, watching 
more U.S.-produced entertainment is related to positive, not 
negative, attitudes toward Americans.  This relationship may be 
explained in several ways including the possibility that watching 
U.S.-produced media content actually produces positive feelings 
towards Americans.  However other explanations are also possible, and 
more likely.  For example, selective exposure theory would suggest 
that Singaporeans students who are already pre-disposed (have a 
favorable attitude) to liking Americans select U.S. entertainment 
media more often than students who do not have favorable feelings 
toward Americans.  Likewise, students who are negative toward 
Americans may avoid U.S.-produced media.
DeFleur and DeFleur's Master Theory assumes that international young 
people have little contact with Americans and therefore they believe 
the images in movies and television are true depictions of American 
life.  However, the Singaporean study revealed high interaction with 
family and friends in America, with one-third having actually visited 
the United States.  Perhaps this familiarity with American people has 
created an appreciation for American culture along with a realization 
that what one sees on TV is not completely like the "real world" in 
America, anymore than images of their own country on television are a 
true depiction of life in Singapore.  As the Indirect Effects Theory 
of the Media would suggest, media effects are filtered through other 
parts of the society such as friends, social groups and personal 
experience (Lazarsfeld, Berelson & Gaudet, 1944).
A closer examination of the Media Depictions of Americans subscale 
(questions 1,3 and 9) in the two studies also raises some 
questions.  DeFleur and DeFleur stated that Attitude toward Americans 
is driven by feelings about violence, sexually immorality and 
criminal activities; however, in the DeFleurs' study and the 
Singaporean study, these three statements did not elicit particularly 
strong responses when compared with questions about Americans being 
materialistic and domineering (questions 5 and 7).  It would appear 
that negative attitudes toward Americans have more to do with 
America's tendency to bully, invade other lands, and consume vast 
amounts of the world's resources -- subjects of international news 
coverage -- than with sex and violence, which are so commonly 
portrayed in American movies and television.
Of course, correlation does not demonstrate causation, particularly 
correlation of statements within a single instrument, as was 
performed in the DeFleur and DeFleur study.  The high correlation 
between the Media Depictions of Americans subscale and the rest of 
the questionnaire does not indicate that media depictions are the 
source of learning attitudes about Americans, as DeFleur and DeFleur 
suggest. Rather, internal item correlation simply indicates the 
reliability of the instrument.
The statement,  "American women are sexually immoral" deserves 
special consideration, because it is one statement that produced 
contradictory findings among young people in DeFleurs' twelve 
countries versus Singapore.  In the DeFleurs' study, this statement 
scored fairly high overall (-1.18) indicating that the sample 
believed American women to be sexually immoral, particularly in 
Islamic countries such as Saudi Arabia (-3.23) and Bahrain (-2.83), 
but also in Mexico (-2.13).  Singaporean students were fairly neutral 
about the statement that American women are sexually immoral (-.34), 
with Singaporeans who had visited America significantly less likely 
to feel this way than were those who had never visited.  This finding 
seems to suggest that coming into direct contact with American girls 
certainly produces a "reality check" for young people who may have 
otherwise been taught that American women are loose.
While sexually immorality is a subject in Hollywood films, it is also 
a strong theme in highly traditional and religious societies (whether 
Islamic or Catholic) where young people are taught the ills of 
promiscuity and examples of desperate girls in America and Western 
Europe are held up as proof. (It should be noted that in the 
DeFleurs' study, Italian and Argentinean students did not find 
American women immoral). DeFleur and DeFleurs' statement that young 
people learn about sexually immoral American women from watching 
American movies rather than from other sources such as religious 
teachings or parents seems unlikely, particularly given the findings 
of this study.
There are several limitations of the Singaporean study, most 
obviously that the sample was a non-random sample of college students 
living in one country.  However, given that college students are the 
future business and political leaders and that Singapore is a 
critical economic and political ally of the United States, this study 
can contribute to the better understanding of the causes of 
anti-Americanism there.  Contradictions in the findings between the 
DeFleur and DeFleur study and the Singapore study can be explained by 
differences in the samples including age (high school versus 
college), income levels (public school students versus university 
students), and country (Singapore versus the twelve countries sampled 
by DeFleur and DeFleur).  However, the overall findings of attitude 
toward Americans were quite similar in the two studies -- the 
differences lay not in the statistics, but in how they were interpreted.
	Based on the analysis above, the Singaporean study does not support 
the DeFleurs' Master Theory of Effects of Mass Communicated 
Entertainment which holds that U.S. media teach teenagers around the 
world to hate Americans, but rather suggests just the opposite, that 
U.S.-produced entertainment media may actually be a positive source 
for engendering pro-American attitudes.  Further investigation of the 
relationship in other countries through the use of more robust 
methodologies is needed to better understand how American popular 
culture may be used "to get them not to hate us."

Table 1
Statistics for rankings of agreement with statements
measuring Attitude Toward Americans
Statement (n=328)
Mean
Median
Mode
Standard Deviation
Variance
"American people are generally quite violent."
3.23
3.00
3
.81
.73
"American people are generous"
3.25
3.00
3
.73
.54
"Many American women are sexually immoral."
3.14
3.00
3
.91
.84
"Americans respect people who are not like themselves."
2.76
3.00
3
.83
.68
"American people are very materialistic."
3.27
3.00
3
.82
.66
"American people have strong religious values."
2.89
3.00
3
.90
.82
"American people like to dominate other people."
3.71
4.00
4
.86
.75
"Americans are a peaceful people."
2.81
3.00
3
.76
.58
"Many American people engage in criminal activities."
3.07
3.00
3
.87
.75
"American people are very concerned about their poor."
2.78
3.00
3
.86
.74
"American people have strong family values."
2.89
3.00
3
.97
.94
"There is little for which I admire Americans."
2.90
3.00
3
.91
.83

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