New York - During the height of the primary season, a sense of Donald Trump overload in the media united a divided electorate.

Now, as things pivot toward a general election campaign almost certain to match Trump against Hillary Clinton, television news producers will be watched to see whether traditional notions of fairness and equal time will take hold in a political season that has been anything but traditional.

The expected Republican nominee so dominated campaign coverage that by late March a Pew Research Center survey found that 75 percent of Americans said the media had given him too much attention.

“Donald Trump does make news and he does drive ratings,” said Kathleen Hall Jamieson, director of the Annenberg Public Policy Center at the University of Pennsylvania. “He’s invariably interesting, in the same way that watching the Indy 500 is interesting. You’re never exactly sure what’s going to happen, but there’s always the possibility of a crash.”... Read More: VIN