http://www.suntimes.com/output/news/cst-nws-miss16.html Most of the missing adults tracked by the FBI are men. More than one in five of those abducted or kidnapped are black.
But you might not get that impression from the news media, and some journalism watchdogs are now taking the industry to task for what they see as a disproportionate emphasis on cases in which white girls and women -- overwhelmingly upper-middle class and attractive -- disappear.
Television executives, who receive much of the criticism, defend their coverage. They emphasize that cases such as the recent disappearance in Aruba of 18-year-old Natalee Holloway of Alabama are extraordinary, and would be newsworthy no matter her background.
Looks count
Indeed, no critic denies that the Holloway case and other disappearances are wrenching for those involved. But some insist that media attention on so few people overshadows the more than 100,000 active files on missing adults and children tracked by the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
''To be blunt, blond white chicks who go missing get covered, and poor, black, Hispanic or other people of color who go missing do not get covered,'' said Tom Rosenstiel, director of the Washington-based Project for Excellence in Journalism.