My radio market is absolutely dominated by National Public Radio / Minnesota Public Radio. Coverage of Obama is unrealistically positive. He can do no wrong. The coverage is almost non-stop. It's almost like a fantasy world. The coverage is wildly skewed to putting Obama and his administration in a positive light. You would have to hear it to believe it.
For conservative talk radio locally, we are gifted with some very talented people like Jason Lewis and Sue Jeffers. They are quite a bit more circumspect than, say, Rush Limbaugh is. Lewis is knowledgeable of economics and focuses on the economic issues in his show. Jeffers is a business woman who focuses on how government policy affects on business. Neither has anything good to say about Obama.
The local paper is the Minneapolis Star-Tribune, which is referred to by conservatives as the "star and sickle" because of its sometimes comical leftist bias. The paper is gradually going out of business, or at least is shrinking dramatically like so many other metropolitan papers. Lately it is absolutely surprising how they have been fair in reporting issues related to Obama and his administration. This seems like nothing less than a miracle.
The other paper, the St. Paul Pioneer Press used to be a major paper but is now essentially a tabloid for the same reasons the Tribune is shrinking. It is no longer worth reading because it has become so weak. Most people who read it appear to be doing so strictly for coverage of local issues.
I can't tell you about TV because I don't watch it.
Minnesota is a left-leaning state because
1) Mining in the northern part of the state has been on the dole for generations
2) Farmers in the rest of the state are on the dole
3) Big government unions are on the dole
4) Over 3/5ths of the state lives in its only large metropolitan area.
5) Universities and medical research facilities are on the dole.
6) It is a welfare magnet, drawing people from within the region, nationally, and even internationally to collect welfare. The largest growing sections of the population are on the dole.
Corporate taxes in Minnesota are the second highest in the world, after Iowa.
It's basically a cold California.