Title: Inventing the News
1Inventing the News
2What is News?
News is not found or gathered. It is
selected and created. It is a creation of a
complex political, cultural and business process.
The process includes the selection, exclusion and
framing of events into a form intelligible to
specific communities.
3Inventing RealityDeciding What Matters
4Whats News? versusWhats Important?Galtung
and Ruge
- Frequency
- Threshold
- Absolute intensity
- Intensity Increase
- Unambiguity
- Meaningfulness
- Cultural proximity
- Relevance
- Consonance
- Predictability
- Demand
- Unexpectedness
- Unpredictability
- Scarcity
- Continuity
- Elite Nations
- Elite People
- Reference to Persons
- Reference to Something Negative
5Frequency
- Frequency the time-span of an event and the
extent to which it 'fits' the frequency of the
newspaper's or news broadcast's schedule.
- Background to the news, economic, social or
political trends - is less likely to make it into
the news as such trends take a long time to
unfold.
6Threshold
- Threshold How big is an event? Is it big enough
to make it into the news? - Whose news?
7Unambiguity
- Unambiguity How clear is the meaning of an
event? The mass media generally tend to go for
closure, Events like murder, car crashes and
robberies are easily grasped so are likely to
make it into the news. - Survey of 300 leading US media professionals
across the US, conducted by The Columbia
Journalism Review, revealed that the most regular
reason why stories don't appear is that they are
'too complicated'.
8Unambiguity
- Taking complex issues and reducing them to an
unambiguous story.
9Meaningfulness
HKU Student Attacked by Crazed Lecturer in Lan
Kwai Fong!
- Events happening in cultures very different from
our own will not be seen as being inherently
meaningful to audiences here. On the other hand,
events in continental Europe and the USA will
make it into the news. The same is likely to
apply within our own society, ethnic groups, the
underprivileged etc. receiving less coverage.
7.4 Earthquake Strikes Mauritania 60,000 Feared
Dead
10Consonance
- Does the event match the media's expectations?
Journalists have a pretty good idea of the
'angle' they want to report an event from, even
before they get there. If the media expect
something to happen, then it will.
11Unexpectedness
- Dog bites man is not news. 'Man bites dog' is
news. - If an event is highly unpredictable, then it is
likely to make it into the news. The
unpredictability does, however, need to be within
the confines of meaningfulness and unambiguity.
12Continuity
- Once a story has been covered, it is likely to
receive further coverage. - Once a story has been covered, similar stories
are likely to be covered.
13Elite Nations
- Reference to elite nations This relates again to
'cultural proximity'. Those nations which are
culturally closest to the US and UK will receive
most of English language coverage -.
14Elite Persons
- The media pay attention to important people.
Anyone the media pay attention to must be
important even when what they say or do isnt.
Bush opens long weekend with a round of golf
KENNEBUNKPORT, Maine (AP) President Bush
opened a long weekend of golf and fishing Friday
by hooking his first drive into a riverbank. He
found his stroke on his second try, cheered by
his father, who proclaimed it a "good ball!"
15Personalization
- Personalisation This connects with
unambiguity and meaningfulness. Events are seen
as the actions of individuals. Incompatibility
between the Government's policies and the
Opposition's is presented as a personal showdown
between the two party leaders. - Social and political issues are only reported if
they can be embodied in an individual, and thus
social conflict of interest is personalised into
conflict between individuals. The effect of this
is that the social origins of events are lost,
and individual motivation is assumed to be the
origin of all action.
16Negativity
- Negativity Bad news is good news. Bad news has
many of the other characteristics as well - it
may be unexpected, unambiguous, consonant with
our general expectations about the world, it may
be 'big', e.g. a major catastrophe etc.
17Framing Positive or NegativeH5N1 Death Toll
Projections 2006 6000 deaths
- Hong Kong is preparing for the outbreak of a
mutated form of bird flu which will kill 6,000
people. Two alternative programs to combat the
disease have been proposed.
- Program A
- 2000 people will be saved.
- Program B
- 2 in 3 chance that zero people will be saved
- BUT
- 1 in 3 chance 6000 people will be saved
18Framing Positive or Negative H5N1 Death Toll
Projections 2006 6000 deaths
- Hong Kong is preparing for the outbreak of a
mutated bird flu which will kill 6000 people. Two
alternative programs to combat the disease have
been proposed.
- Program C
- 4000 people will die.
- Program D
- 1 in 3 chance that nobody will die
- BUT,
- 2 in 3 chance that 6000 people will die.
19Framing Positive or NegativeImpact of Positive
and NegativeFraming on Risk AversionKahneman
Tservesky, 1984 Study
20Prospect Theory
- The prospect of a loss has a greater impact on
decision making than does the prospect of an
equivalent gain. - People are more likely to choose risk-free
alternatives in cases of gain - People are more likely to choose risky
alternatives to avoid loss.