This exploratoy study uses cognitive-mapping techniques to investigate the ethical sensitivity of 99 television news viewers. Transcripts of structured in-depth interviews w e analyzed according tofour critical content dimensions ofethical sensitivity: sto y characteristics, ethical issues, umsequences,andstakeholders. The study identijied the indicators ofethical sensitivity that represent the specific concepts making up each of the content dimensions andfound a consistent pattern o f h e a y reliance on just afew of the available concepts. This study also investigated the d i f m c e s in ethical sensitivib among viewers and presented preliminary descriptions of some dtjierent types of ethical sensitivity. The study concluded that although it may indeed be useful to consider individuals as having low or high ethical sensitivity, it may be moreffuitful to consider them as refrecting d1-t types of ethical sensitivity. Strengths and weaknesses of using cognitive mapping are also presented.cholarly investigations of media ethics have tended to focus on the content of media messages (sensationalism, invasion of S privacy stereotyping, excessive violence) or on the behavior and decisions of media owners and gatekeepers (bias in editing and reporting, monopoly ownership, advertiser pressures). There are few studies of how audience members see ethical issues and problems in the news content they consume. Aside from a few studies of audience attitudes to the news media (Bower, 1.985; Roper, 1985) and studies of media credibility (Gaziano, 1988; Johnson, 1993;West, 1994), there is little empirical research on how audience members process, evaluate, and react to ethically problematic media content. More attention to audience reception of ethically controversial media content would help redress the preoccupation with gatekeeper behaviors and encourage a perspective acknowledging reciprocal roles and responsibilities of media and audience.