The French site L'Observatoire des médias has released a map of the world "as seen by news editors". The countries on the interactive map change colour and expand depending on how many articles have been written about them by the chosen publication, altering the world map to represent its coverage. The creators of this innovative project, Gilles Bruno and Nicolas Kayser-Bril, agreed to create a version for the Observers site.
When student Nicolas Kayser-Bril created the charts as part of an investigation into the economy of the media, he gained some interesting insights into the media's view of the world:

The final point I'd like to draw from my work is that each country represents the world in a way almost identical to their nationality. The fact that press agencies are the main source of information is the most probable reason. Because of a lack of means, there are actually very few journalists on the ground but they form the views of the entire editorial world.
I've only mapped out a few publications because of a technical problem — I could only get data from sites that are easy to analyse. If I have the time and the resources, I'm hoping to extend my work to cover other news sites, mainly in France and Germany but also the rest of the world. I'd like to add that the explanations I'm giving are not just assumptions. Analysing all the statistical data that I've collected takes time and could be the subject matter of my dissertation."