Title: 12. News and Information
112. News and Information
Christopher Burnett California State, Long Beach
2Cooperative For-Profit News Gathering
- New York Associated Press, 1848
- Six New York papers pooled foreign telegraph news
costs - Became the Associated Press (AP)
- United Press, 1884
- For profit news service, competed with AP
- Became United Press International (UPI)
3Other News Services
- Agence France-Presse
- France
- Reuters
- Great Britain
- Information Telegraph Agency of Russia (ITAR)
- Agenzia Nationale Stampa Associata (ANSA)
- Italy
- Deutsche Presse Agentur (DPA)
- Germany
- Xinhua
- China
jmmelton/motleyimage
4Civil War Photojournalism
- The Civil War and censorship of the news
- Government accreditation
- Press passes
- The Birth of Photojournalism
- Matthew Brady
- 1st national news photographer
- 3500 war photos
- Life magazine
- Margaret Bourke-White
- Early photojournalist
Bettman/Corbis
Brady
Acme/Corbis
Bourke-White
5Tabloid News Takes Over
- Early 20th Century expansion
- Yellow journalism
- Fierce competition
- New York alone had 10 daily newspapers
- Penny papers
- Grisly crime, illicit sex and large, graphic
photos - Radios influence
- Shared audience
6Newsreels
- News at the movies
- British Pathe
- 1900-1970
- Fox Movietone News
- 1919-1960
- 10 minutes long
- Narrated
- Weekly updates
- Employed over 1000 camera people
- Global coverage
- Entertainment, travel, sports, features, etc.
7Radio The Sounds of WWII
- Ernie Pyle
- Print reporter from the front
- Edward R. Murrow
- The London Blitz, 1940
- Painting pictures with words
- Covered important events from 1921-1947
- Radio station news departments
- Maintained until format radio era
- Formed the foundation for television news
Scripps Howard News Service
Ernie Pyle
8The Golden Age of TV News
- John F. Kennedy
- Presidential debates
- Inauguration
- Cuban Missile Crisis
- Assassination, 1963
- Vietnam War
- Chicago Democratic Convention, 1968
- Candid war coverage
- Watergate
- 1973 Burglary
- Nixons resignation, 1974
AP/Wide World Photo
Johnson sworn in after Kennedys death
9TV News Expands Contracts
- Local News expansion
- Up to 2 hours local TV news
- Broadcast deregulation, 1980s
- Network consolidation
- Local stations bought out
- Cable News Network
- Round the clock news
- Global presence
- Alternative to networks
- 1990s Decline
- Internet affect
- Network and local decline
Korin Ziv/Corbis/Sigma
CNNs Christian Amanpour
10TV News Viewing Trends
Illustration 12.1
11Iraq War
- Military-press relations
- War coverage
- Embedded Reporters
- 600 reporters
- Frontline access
- Military control
- Reversal of past policies
- Non-stop coverage
Spencer Platt/Getty Images
Iraq War reporters
12News on the Internet
- Internet nonstop information
- Service providers (AOL) compile headlines and
news links from many sources - Targeted to individual needs
- Replacing TV news
- 44 go online for news once a week
- 25 go to Internet as chief source of news
- More news available from many sources
13Top Ranking Internet News Sites
Illustration 12.2
14Earnings for Local News People
Illustration 12.3
15Trends among Journalists
- No evidence that reporters insert ideology into
their stories - More minorities
- Gains for women
- Journalists are unlikely to challenge prevailing
political and social values. - Conformity in reporting. Consensus Journalism?
16Blurring Distinctions News, Reality Shows and
Advertising
- Reality TV
- Survivor, Real Stories of the Highway Patrol,
Americas Most Wanted - Lines blurred between news and entertainment
- Infomercials
- Making advertising look like documentary news
- Entertainment-driven news
- Constructing news broadcasts along entertainment
lines
Justin Sullivan/Getty Images
17Journalists News Values
- Agenda-Setting Function
- Not telling what to think but what to think about
- Ethnocentrism
- American bias
- Altruistic Democracy
- Responsible Capitalism
- Small-Town Pastoralism
- Individualism
- Moderatism
- Order
- Leadership
- Attention focused on leaders (e.g. the U.S.
president)
18Source and Credibility
- Confidentiality of sources
- Woodward Bernstein
- Deep Throat Watergate
- Mark Felt, FBI agent
- Judith Miller, New York Times
- Mark Cooper, Time
- Both ordered to reveal source of CIA leak case
- Miller spent four months in jail
- Shield Laws
- Protect journalists against revealing sources
- No federal shield law
- Credibility and audience
- The Internet has captured audience credibility
Win McNamee/Getty Images
Bernstein (L) and Woodward
19Views of News Media
Illustration 12.4
20Critical Discussion
- During the war with Iraq in 2003, hundreds of
journalists were embedded with military units and
reported under carefully controlled conditions.
Many hailed the practice as a new era in war
reporting. Others criticized it as pro-war
propaganda. What do you think? - Recent cases have revived the controversy over
confidential sources as the basis for news
stories. Should journalists be required to reveal
their sources if ordered to do so by a judge?