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Are you ready to vote on Nov. 8? Here's a closer look at the 17 propositions on the California ballot with stories from California Counts, a collaboration between Capital Public Radio, KQED, KPCC and KPBS to cover the 2016 elections in California. Proposition 51: School BondsProposition 52: State Fees on HospitalsProposition 53: Revenue BondsProposition 54: LegislatureProposition 55: Tax Extension to Fund Education and HealthcareProposition 56: Cigarette Tax to Fund Healthcare, Tobacco Use Prevention, Research, and Law EnforcementProposition 57: Criminal SentencesProposition 58: English language educationProposition 60: Adult Films, Condoms, Health RequirementsProposition 61: State Prescription Drug PurchasesProposition 62: Death PenaltyProposition 63: Firearms, Ammunition SalesProposition 64: Marijuana LegalizationProposition 65: Carry-Out Bags ChargesProposition 66: Death PenaltyProposition 67: Referendum to Overturn Ban on Single-Use Plastic BagsBeyond these measures, there may be others on your local ballot. You can look them up with Capital Public Radio's voter guide.

Cable TV News Named As Most Helpful Source This Election

Members of the media watch a Republican presidential debate on cable channel CNN last December.
L.E. Baskow
/
AFP/Getty Images
Members of the media watch a Republican presidential debate on cable channel CNN last December.

So, you know that presidential election you've been hearing so much about?

Well, you're not alone.

A new survey conducted last month found there's a lot of interest in the presidential campaign; nine in 10 American adults had learned something about the election in the past week.

Cable news was named most helpful by 24 percent of those who learned about the election in the past week. <em>Survey conducted Jan. 18-27, 2016</em>.
/ Pew Research Center
/
Pew Research Center
Cable news was named most helpful by 24 percent of those who learned about the election in the past week. Survey conducted Jan. 18-27, 2016.

That news came from at least one of 11 different types of media sources asked about by the Pew Research Center. Those sources range from cable TV news to the candidates' own websites.

Most, 24 percent, said they found cable TV news "most helpful." Social media, local TV, news websites (like this one), radio and the TV networks' nightly news programs were deemed "most helpful" for 10 percent to 14 percent of those surveyed.

At the bottom of the list were print newspapers and candidate or campaign websites.

According to Pew, the "high level of learning" in this election cycle "is consistent with recent research that has shown strong interest in this election, even more so than at the same point in the previous two presidential elections."

The survey found that cable TV news was called "most helpful" in all age groups except those 18 to 29.

Not surprisingly among millennials, it was social media that came out on top, followed by news website/apps, cable TV news and radio.

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

NPR News' Brian Naylor is a correspondent on the Washington Desk. In this role, he covers politics and federal agencies.