CONTACT: Jenny Wells, (859) 257
... great deal of debate and discussion over ‘Ali Dubyiah,’ and we’re pleased to provide the forum for that. The post-election timing couldn’t be better. And, whatever their own political views, I think our journalism students will benefit from hearing how someone who has always taken a journalistic app ...
... great deal of debate and discussion over ‘Ali Dubyiah,’ and we’re pleased to provide the forum for that. The post-election timing couldn’t be better. And, whatever their own political views, I think our journalism students will benefit from hearing how someone who has always taken a journalistic app ...
The Fourth Power under Pressure
... can be organized on specific topics; news and opinions can be posted, liked or shared. If things go well, citizens acquire new opportunities to be informed and participate. In this way, a counterbalance can arise to the published opinion that confronts the established media with the voice of the peo ...
... can be organized on specific topics; news and opinions can be posted, liked or shared. If things go well, citizens acquire new opportunities to be informed and participate. In this way, a counterbalance can arise to the published opinion that confronts the established media with the voice of the peo ...
MY views on Indian Journalists:
... enthusiasm has to retrograde for it is Superfluous. The Journalist has to acquit and extricate himself from this brevity else the repercussions will not be palliative. Journalists seem to mitigate on things that are severe while ponder on petty things. Journalism is rotting and for it to perpetuate, ...
... enthusiasm has to retrograde for it is Superfluous. The Journalist has to acquit and extricate himself from this brevity else the repercussions will not be palliative. Journalists seem to mitigate on things that are severe while ponder on petty things. Journalism is rotting and for it to perpetuate, ...
History of Journalism
... Modern, factory-produced movable type was available in the late 19th century. ...
... Modern, factory-produced movable type was available in the late 19th century. ...
a particular tendency or inclination, especially one that prevents
... readers of daily or weekly current events. ...
... readers of daily or weekly current events. ...
1920`s Advertisements
... The Saturday Evening Post began to target consumerism and advertisements started taking off in these and other publications. ...
... The Saturday Evening Post began to target consumerism and advertisements started taking off in these and other publications. ...
Gatekeeping | Gatewatching
... to identify important material as it becomes available We need order, surveillance, warning systems to alert us; information for action, decision making; culture for connection and community ...
... to identify important material as it becomes available We need order, surveillance, warning systems to alert us; information for action, decision making; culture for connection and community ...
Hazelwood School District v. Kuhlmeier In May 1983, students in the
... problems, they may have been able to resolve them. They were upset to find out instead that two pages, which included a number of non-offensive articles, had been deleted. They felt that this censorship was a direct violation of their First Amendment rights, so they took their case to the U.S. Distr ...
... problems, they may have been able to resolve them. They were upset to find out instead that two pages, which included a number of non-offensive articles, had been deleted. They felt that this censorship was a direct violation of their First Amendment rights, so they took their case to the U.S. Distr ...
Chapter 13 The Culture of Journalism: Values, Ethics, and
... VALUES in American Journalism • Horace Greeley, 1841: Reporters’ neutrality would make them “wimps who stood for nothing” • That same neutrality now a major value of conventional journalism • David Eason: “Reporters…have no special method for determining the truth of a situation nor a special langu ...
... VALUES in American Journalism • Horace Greeley, 1841: Reporters’ neutrality would make them “wimps who stood for nothing” • That same neutrality now a major value of conventional journalism • David Eason: “Reporters…have no special method for determining the truth of a situation nor a special langu ...
Journalistic Style Copy 101
... Writing Style: Academic, Informal or Journalistic? Look at these three passages about accounting. They all say the same thing, but in different styles. Each style has certain features. A feature may belong to more than one style; for example, using short forms of verbs (can’t, he’s, etc.) is common ...
... Writing Style: Academic, Informal or Journalistic? Look at these three passages about accounting. They all say the same thing, but in different styles. Each style has certain features. A feature may belong to more than one style; for example, using short forms of verbs (can’t, he’s, etc.) is common ...
Click here to a text version of this
... practices that, if pursued, likely would have led the magazine’s editors to reconsider publishing Jackie's narrative so prominently, if at all. The published story glossed over the gaps in the magazine's reporting by using pseudonyms and by failing to state where important information had come from. ...
... practices that, if pursued, likely would have led the magazine’s editors to reconsider publishing Jackie's narrative so prominently, if at all. The published story glossed over the gaps in the magazine's reporting by using pseudonyms and by failing to state where important information had come from. ...
Update LXXIII - McGraw Hill Higher Education
... Find me the oldest dog in America, or the richest man in South Dakota. Force the new White House secretary to download The Daily for the first time because everyone at the gaggle is asking about a story we broke. Get in front of a story and make it ours—force the rest of the media to follow us. It’s ...
... Find me the oldest dog in America, or the richest man in South Dakota. Force the new White House secretary to download The Daily for the first time because everyone at the gaggle is asking about a story we broke. Get in front of a story and make it ours—force the rest of the media to follow us. It’s ...
Mapping the future: news, data and automation in the Nordic region
... Aggregated data from four projects • Between a robot and a zombie: The radical transformation of news work (2015) • Robot journalism in local contexts (2016) • New business models in Nordic media (2016) ...
... Aggregated data from four projects • Between a robot and a zombie: The radical transformation of news work (2015) • Robot journalism in local contexts (2016) • New business models in Nordic media (2016) ...
What Can I Do with a Major in MASS COMMUNICATIONS?
... What Can I Do with a Major in MASS COMMUNICATIONS? Mass communication plays an influential role in modern society. Mass communication is a process in which a person, group of people, or an organization sends a message through a channel of communication to a large group of anonymous and heterogeneous ...
... What Can I Do with a Major in MASS COMMUNICATIONS? Mass communication plays an influential role in modern society. Mass communication is a process in which a person, group of people, or an organization sends a message through a channel of communication to a large group of anonymous and heterogeneous ...
investigative reporting
... THE HISTORY OF INVESTIGATIVE REPORTING How long have people been nosy? Ok, that’s not the question…. But investigative reporting is one of those things that drives most people interested in journalism to be interested in journalism Compelling stories High impact Shock factor High engagement ...
... THE HISTORY OF INVESTIGATIVE REPORTING How long have people been nosy? Ok, that’s not the question…. But investigative reporting is one of those things that drives most people interested in journalism to be interested in journalism Compelling stories High impact Shock factor High engagement ...
Where does the journalist fit in the NLG
... The reflections captured from my own data collected from the news agencies STT and TT are mostly supported by the arguments presented above. Both agencies have an interest in news automation, but the lack of resources is the main barrier holding them back. Both have experimented with automation, but ...
... The reflections captured from my own data collected from the news agencies STT and TT are mostly supported by the arguments presented above. Both agencies have an interest in news automation, but the lack of resources is the main barrier holding them back. Both have experimented with automation, but ...
Journalism II - Cincinnati Christian School
... The student will be able to: • Design page layouts using basic elements of design. • Design and layout pages using the software InDesign. • Recognize elements of design used in photographs. • Demonstrate knowledge of photo techniques by taking photos using composition techniques such as leading line ...
... The student will be able to: • Design page layouts using basic elements of design. • Design and layout pages using the software InDesign. • Recognize elements of design used in photographs. • Demonstrate knowledge of photo techniques by taking photos using composition techniques such as leading line ...
3dayhistory
... Journalism that focus on the entertainment business and its products. Like fashion journalism, entertainment journalism covers industryspecific news while targeting general audiences beyond those working in the industry itself. ...
... Journalism that focus on the entertainment business and its products. Like fashion journalism, entertainment journalism covers industryspecific news while targeting general audiences beyond those working in the industry itself. ...
Megan Cole
... presidency, but that would cement a new paradigm in journalism. Two brazen Washington Post reporters, Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein, famously investigated the break-in and followed it all the way to the White House. Over the next two years, the pair uncovered a series of political scandals conduct ...
... presidency, but that would cement a new paradigm in journalism. Two brazen Washington Post reporters, Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein, famously investigated the break-in and followed it all the way to the White House. Over the next two years, the pair uncovered a series of political scandals conduct ...
Proclamation - The Denver Post
... lords and the commoners, but in the reporters’ gallery there sat a Fourth Estate more important far than those; and WHEREAS, freedom of the press in America has been cherished since at least 1733, when John Peter Zenger, a New York publisher, criticized the newly appointed colonial governor of New Y ...
... lords and the commoners, but in the reporters’ gallery there sat a Fourth Estate more important far than those; and WHEREAS, freedom of the press in America has been cherished since at least 1733, when John Peter Zenger, a New York publisher, criticized the newly appointed colonial governor of New Y ...
SAW Yellow Journalism
... In the late 1800s, one of the best-known New Yorkers was not a person at all. He was the Yellow Kid, a character in a wildly popular newspaper comic. For a time, the Yellow Kid appeared in two newspapers at once, the New York World and the New York Journal, which competed to own the comic. The strug ...
... In the late 1800s, one of the best-known New Yorkers was not a person at all. He was the Yellow Kid, a character in a wildly popular newspaper comic. For a time, the Yellow Kid appeared in two newspapers at once, the New York World and the New York Journal, which competed to own the comic. The strug ...
- Sheffield Hallam University Research Archive
... newspapers were cheaper than London papers as they were printed weekly and there was no postal cost, therefore they appealed to the property owing middle class of shopkeepers, farmers and merchants (Harris 1996). Newspapers were no longer the sole domain of the upper class as the market made them a ...
... newspapers were cheaper than London papers as they were printed weekly and there was no postal cost, therefore they appealed to the property owing middle class of shopkeepers, farmers and merchants (Harris 1996). Newspapers were no longer the sole domain of the upper class as the market made them a ...
INSTITUTE FOR RURAL JOURNALISM AND COMMUNITY ISSUES ANNUAL REPORT 2008
... freedom-of-information issues in Lexington and Madisonville. The Institute co-sponsored the Kentucky Diabetes Summit, recruiting from counties with high rates of the disease journalists who returned home and wrote stories about its local impact. The newspaper in the No.1 county did a four-part serie ...
... freedom-of-information issues in Lexington and Madisonville. The Institute co-sponsored the Kentucky Diabetes Summit, recruiting from counties with high rates of the disease journalists who returned home and wrote stories about its local impact. The newspaper in the No.1 county did a four-part serie ...
New Media and Journalism New forms of journalism:
... as an online community, the Huffington Post has gained a niche in new media journalism. In addition, founder Arianna Huffington has been featured as a guest on CNN, and the site is often featured on television media stories reporting on blogs. ...
... as an online community, the Huffington Post has gained a niche in new media journalism. In addition, founder Arianna Huffington has been featured as a guest on CNN, and the site is often featured on television media stories reporting on blogs. ...
History of American journalism
Journalism in America began as a humble affair and became a political force in the campaign for American independence. Following independence the first article of U.S. Constitution guaranteed freedom of the press and speech and the American press grew rapidly following the American Revolution. The press became a key support element to the country's political parties but also organized religious institutions. During the 19th century newspapers began to expand and appear outside eastern U.S. cities. From the 1830s onward the Penny press began to play a major role in American journalism and technological advancements such as the telegraph and faster printing presses in the 1840s helped expand the press of the nation as it experienced rapid economic and demographic growth. By 1900 major newspapers had become profitable powerhouses of advocacy, muckraking and sensationalism, along with serious, and objective news-gathering. During the early 20th Century, prior to rise of television, the average American read several newspapers per-day. Starting in the 1920s changes in technology again morphed the nature of American journalism as radio and later, television, began to play increasingly important roles. In the late 20th Century, much of American journalism became housed in big media conglomerates (principally owned by the media moguls, Ted Turner and Rupert Murdoch). With the coming of digital journalism in the 21st Century, all newspapers faced a business crisis as readers turned to the internet for sources and advertisers followed them. New social media technologies such as Twitter have proved to be a major source and venue for American journalism in the early 21st century.see also History of American newspapers