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March 2026 editorial profile for BBC World. Below: how this outlet framed the actors and regions it covered most in March 2026. Tap any tile to jump to the detailed card.
One tile per entity (country or public figure) covered enough times this month to draw a confident editorial-stance read. Colour from red (hostile) to green (supportive); intensity scales with headline volume. Tap to jump to the detailed card.
Coverage is diverse across UK-related topics (sports, politics, health, weather) without a unified stance toward the country itself. Some headlines are positive (e.g., Raducanu impressing), others critical (e.g., NHS collapse), but none frame GB as a whole positively or negatively. Stance is neutral due to lack of consistent editorial treatment of the entity.
Coverage is predominantly factual reporting of events involving Iran as a country, not evaluative toward the entity itself. Some headlines (e.g., 14) show crowds rallying, which could imply sympathy, but overall the outlet maintains a neutral stance. The entity is a nation-state, not a single actor, so stance is inherently mixed.
Coverage is mixed: some headlines report US actions neutrally (e.g., Texas primaries, FBI story), but the overall selection skews toward negative framing of Trump administration policies and scandals. The entity is 'US' as a country, but most headlines focus on Trump administration actions, which are treated skeptically. Stance is -1 rather than -2 because not all headlines are hostile; some are factual or neutral.
The outlet does not adopt a consistently positive or negative stance; it reports Starmer's policy announcements neutrally (e.g., £53m support, defence pact) while also covering criticism from Trump, Badenoch, and Labour MPs without amplifying or rebutting it. The tone is journalistic distance, not advocacy or hostility.
Some headlines report Trump's actions neutrally or quote him authoritatively (e.g., #8, #24), but the overall selection emphasizes risk, confusion, and allied pushback, indicating a skeptical stance toward Trump's leadership and strategy.
The outlet's stance is clearly negative toward Epstein, treating him as a perpetrator of serious crimes. The coverage centers on his victims, legal fallout, and associates, with no sympathetic or neutral framing of Epstein himself.
Coverage focuses on Lebanon as a location of conflict and civilian suffering, not as an actor. The outlet does not take a stance toward the country itself; it reports on Hezbollah's role and Israel's actions neutrally. The entity (Lebanon as a country) is treated as a passive setting rather than an agent, so stance is neutral.
Coverage is diverse and topic-driven; no unified editorial stance toward Australia as an entity. Headlines range from neutral sports results to critical crime reporting, but the outlet does not frame Australia itself positively or negatively.
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