In Brooke Gladstone’s graphic novel entitled “The Influencing Machine”, journalistic media is evaluated throughout its evolution. Due to the complexity of the subject, many different qualities of the media are explored throughout the novel; however, four main, controversial themes are always evident, and those four are the purpose, necessity, honesty, and reliability of journalistic media. After reading Gladstone’s informative graphic novel, enough information can be acquired in order to form valid, cohesive opinions regarding different characteristics of journalistic media. Throughout history, all prosperous phenomena share one commonality: they’re purposeful.…
Sanger, Margaret. “Woman and the New Morality.” Woman and the New Race. New York: Brentano’s, 1920. Bartleby.…
1960s Television Imagine yourself sitting in the living room with your family. It’s the mid 1960s, and you’re flipping through channels until you reach CNN, where John F. Kennedy is standing at his post, giving a speech, with Nixon right behind him. You are watching the very first televised presidential debate. You decide to watch something else, so you click the remote, and Fred Flintstone appears on the screen, living life in the town of Bedrock.…
A Current Affair is mainly targeted at adults as mature topic matter is discussed and analysed. The program is currently presented by Tracy Grimshaw along with other experienced journalists. A Current Affair typically delivers a sensationalist view to attract its target audience, creating the effect that it “must” be watched. The subject matter is perceived as irrelevant as mostly exaggerated events are broadcasted. During the events of this broadcast, the use of textual features greatly increases its perceived importance.…
The news I'll get from here usually is about right wing politicians, or even news networks such as CNN, and just the ridiculous stuff they tend to do. I'm not going out of my way to look at what is on Fox News so when I watch these shows, I’ll get a small dose of all the crazy. I think that even this goes with Postman's ideas about how “we have multiple media whose forms are well suited to fragmented conversation.” (8) and his thoughts on how television “made it possible to move decontextualized information over vast spaces at incredible speed” (8). All of these different ways for me to get my news are still just small fragments and on television it is not likely for them to give you the complete story.…
Whether it’s to know your weekly weather, to stay up to date on citywide information, or to be the source of any and all information when disaster strikes, the news is where people go. The Columbia Broadcasting System, or CBS, began in 1927 and continues today as an active news television network. For years CBS has been keeping their viewers up to date on all of the information they need to know to help them get through the day. The end of every day became special because the CBS Evening News helped viewers prepare for the next day ahead; and to help these viewers get ahead was none other than the infamous Walter Cronkite. Walter Cronkite was a household name from the 1960s all the way up to the turn of the century.…
In his article “selling the air a critique of the policy of commercial broadcasting in the United States” Thomas Streeter gives a brief information about the process of development of radio broadcasting between 1900and 1930. It is understandable that like any new phenomena, there were errors and changes in strategies. It start with exploring how broadcasting was organized by liberal corporate basis. Radio like Telegraph and was a new technology but also had more advantage such as being small and lightweight, and inexpensive. Article peruses how corporate liberals successfully shaped laws and institutional structures to have broadcasting as the main point of consumer economy while ignoring other potentials of popular usage of radio (cite, yer,p. 61).…
Jacobs and Wild argue that though there is a significant scholarly and public interest in the Daily Show and the Colbert Report’s programs, little is known about the kind of influence these new media genres are having in the public sphere. However, there are a number of factors that may explain where the Daily Show and the Colbert Report fit to into informing the public. Knowledge Levels of the Audiences: There are significant differences in the knowledge levels of the audiences for different news outlets. Nevertheless, there is no clear connection between news formats and what audiences know.…
The civil rights movement played a crucial role in the emerging production practices and self- understanding of network information workers— the makers of news, documentary, and public affairs programming—during the 1950s. During the time, TV news was figuring out what it is going to be. Civil rights was important to TV because not only did it provideTV journalism with much needed vivid pictures and clear-cut stories, but more importantly, it also gave TV the opportunity to define itself, in a period where the emergence of TV and civil rights movement was simultaneous. TV’s role was no longer providing objective reports; it became a weapon that rendered the success of the movement. It became a medium that addressed civil rights issues, and it became a tool for positive change…
Television in the 60s were an average in a family household. Now, television viewing averaged up to five hours a day, whereas household radio usage dropped down. Also, less people went to movies during the 60’s, which shows that television was popular. Five beloved television shows of the 60’s were some one might know about today. Some shows include The Addams Family, The Ed Sullivan Show, The Flintstones, Gilligan’s Island, and The Twilight Zone.…
Broadcasting presidential elections on television has been influential in the United States since the 1960’s. Some think it has heavily influenced who is elected, made elections fairer and more accessible, and even moved candidates from pursuing issues to pursuing image. Holding a presidential election today without a television debate would seem almost undemocratic, that’s not what many people thought at the time of the first debates. First of all, the advent of television in the late 1940’s gave rise to belief that a new era was opening in public communication. One of the great contributions expected of the television lay in its presumed capacity to inform and stimulate the political interest of the American electorate.…
When people envision what television is today it is quite simple: a large screen with HD quality and hundreds of channels which are easy to access. Unbelievably there was a time where television was not like that, where quality was not all that mattered, where viewers only had a certain amount of channels to access. Welcome to Maria Paulercio’s television era, the 1950s. Television has transformed dramatically since the 1950’s from the look to what was produced and put on the air. It had an important role in the lives of those who watched it, but it did not control their lives as it does today.…
“In 1995, a marketing firm determined that Walter Cronkite was still America's most trusted TV personality. Cronkite's response to the polls was typical of his modesty and sense of humor: ‘They must not have polled my wife’” (Newsmakers). When someone has witnessed a vast amount of history that is an amazing success, however, when someone has reported over fifty years of history, that is a terrific triumph. Walter Cronkite did just that.…
Integrity is the quality of being honest and having strong moral principles or moral uprightness. Your integrity can make or break your career, depending on how you show it in what you do, in Good Night and Good Luck, a movie directed by George Clooney, questions integrity by saying it’s a two-sided world. An argument on integrity is being made that it’s a two sided world and also asks if it’s situation where Edward R. Murrow’s reputation is always in black-in-white because of this. Edward R Murrow’s career has been lead and powered by his integrity, although it sometimes gets him in trouble. On one certain broadcast that the head executive of CBS, William Paley, didn’t want Murrow to do, decided to give him a special offer, “There's a Knickerbocker…
The local station operator, no matter how indifferent, is going to carry the program--he has to--he's getting paid for it. Then it's up to the networks to fill the hall. I am not here talking about editorializing but about straightaway exposition as direct, unadorned and impartial as fallible human beings can make it. Just once in a while let us exalt the importance of ideas and information. The main points of Murrow's speech were to inform the audience about journalism and journalists obligation to a society.…