Still, the literature on international news flow offers less information and insight than one might hope it would. Empirical data on press performance is still limited and largely descriptive. Moving from such descriptive content analysis studies, researchers have further sought to identify professional and system factors which might account for the particular patterns of foreign reporting thus documented. Yet while such studies have become quite sophisticated in their categories, they still tell us little about public behavior per se. Readership studies, on the other hand, have delved into public utilization of available news content, but have paid very little attention to foreign news as a discrete category and have seldom broken the category down any further.To help address this research gap, the project here reported combined the categories of news flow research with the objectives of readership studies, in a pilot field experiment in audience reaction to and interest in foreign news. In addition to providing more exact information about public news habits and interests, this approach can also provide an interesting check on the validity for the marketplace of news values which have been hypothesized through news flow research or identified in communicator studies. In the longer term, such a approach can provide helpful guidance to the press itself by way of suggesting how audience interest might be maximized for foreign affairs coverage.