“…The potential for psychological impact from such exposure is demonstrated in various studies evidencing the relationship between news coverage of terrorist attacks and anxiety (Ben-Zue, Gil, & Shamshins, 2012;Shoshani & Slone, 2008;Slone, 2000), distress (Silver, Holman, McIntosh, Poulin, & Gil-Rivas, 2002), threat perception (Rubaltelli & Pittarello, 2018), reduced trust (Giordano & Lindström, 2016), support for military intervention (Soroka, Loewen, Fournier, & Rubenson, 2016;Gadarian, 2010), increased respect for authority (Tamborini et al, 2017), and outgroup prejudice (Das, Bushman, Bezemer, Kerkhof, Vermeulen, 2009). Furthermore, news coverage of the ensuing European "refugee/immigration crisis" channelled the same fears, contextualising the crisis in terms of socio-economic impact, cultural dilution, loss of border control and chaos (Balch & Balabanova, 2016, Lawlor, 2015, Pruitt, 2019. Images of over-crowded boats crossing the Mediterranean prompted analogies of water-related disquieting wording such as "flood", "wave", "tide", "stream" and "deluge" (Pruitt, 2019).…”