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Chapter 14: The Culture of Journalism: Values, Ethics, and Democracy Some guiding questions What key values underlie modern journalism? What ethical issues face journalists? What legacy has print journalism left in the era of electronic journalism? What is public journalism, and how does it differ from conventional journalism? Problems facing modern journalism INFORMATION OVERLOAD: Are we producing too much information? PUBLIC ALIENATION: Does all this news improve public or political life? Does it involve citizens in public life? Food for thought: What is NEWS, anyway? Is what we call NEWS: Process of gathering information? A kind of narrative storytelling? Or both? Criteria for NEWSWORTHINESS Timeliness Proximity Conflict Prominence Human interest Consequence Usefulness Novelty Deviance VALUES IN AMERICAN JOURNALISM THE MYTH OF NEUTRALITY What does it mean to remain neutral? Detached? Objective? Can reporters be detached observers of social experience without opinions? Doesn’t the subjective process of story-writing involve interpretation and shaping of facts? Food for thought: Are journalists merely neutral channels of factual information -- or are they well-informed citizens actively shaping public opinion? “Enduring values” of journalism Ethnocentrism Responsible capitalism Small-town pastoralism Individualism ETHICS AND THE NEWS MEDIA Food for thought: What is the moral and social responsibility of journalists -- not only for their stories, but also for the actual events or issues they shape? ETHICAL PREDICAMENTS Deploying deception Invading privacy Conflict of interest SPJ Code of Ethics Seek truth and report it Minimize harm Act independently Be accountable THE LEGACY OF PRINT JOURNALISM Rituals that underlie the practice of journalism REPORTING RITUALS Focusing on the present Getting a good story Getting a story first Relying on experts Balancing story conflict Acting as adversaries JOURNALISM IN THE AGE OF TELEVISION Print News vs. TV News Broadcast news driven by technology Broadcast news must limit stories to fit into time slots between commercials. TV news derives its credibility from live, on-the-spot reporting, believable imagery, and viewers’ trust in reporters. Common criticisms of TV news Format too slick and homogenized Too much emphasis on crimes and disasters Overemphasis on “sound bites” Overemphasis on youth and attractiveness of anchors Dislike of chatty “happy talk” CONVENTIONAL NEWS, PUBLIC JOURNALISM, AND DEMOCRACY COMPETING MODELS of JOURNALISM INFORMATION or MODERN model: emphasizes describing events and issues from a neutral perspective PARTISAN or EUROPEAN model: emphasizes interpretive analysis of happenings and journalistic advocacy Alternative model: PUBLIC JOURNALISM Rather than just “telling the news,” has a broader mission of helping public life Journalists participate in public life rather than being detached observers Rather than just describing wrongs, tries to imagine what society COULD be like Sees readers not as consumers but as active public citizens Criticisms of Public Journalism Merely panders to what readers want Compromises journalists’ credibility Removes editorial control over stories Undermines opposing-viewpoint conventions by seeking community consensus and middle ground Doesn’t address changing economic structures of news industry Food for thought: What are the strengths and limitations of each model of journalism? MORE food for thought: What is DELIBERATIVE DEMOCRACY, and how does it differ from REPRESENTATIVE DEMOCRACY? How can journalism help?