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12 Cards in this Set
- Front
- Back
News sources couldry et al 2006 |
Found 85% of people regularly watched tv news in comparison to 23% who use the Internet |
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Mquail 1992 |
Suggests because events happen it doesn’t make it news pointing out news selection news values held by organisers and organisational constraints celebrities with big followings rare occasions and world problems |
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Hegemonic Marxists |
The Gumg have shown that selection and presentation is not a neutral process |
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Ofcom 2005 survey |
Found 94% of the uk population believe it is important for tv news to be impartial |
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News values |
Spencer Thomas 2008 suggest that news values help to define what journalists see as news worthy |
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News values |
Extraordinariness Threshold. In ambiguity. Reference to elite. Reference to elite nations. Personalisation. Frequency. Continuity Negativity |
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Criticisms |
Brighton and foy criticise this list because their compilers assume that there is an consensus to what is newsworthy |
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Churnalism news companies |
Making thousand of redundancies most stories are now gathered by press association Davies 2007 argues that journalists should now be called churnalists because they do not do it properly anymore it’s all copied from somewhere else |
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Citizen journalism |
Most live footage of disasters is captured by citizens on mobile phones drudge report for example is more so a blog |
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Criticisms of citizen journalism |
Keen 2008 dismisses citizen journalism as offering opinion as fact Couldry 2010 empirically investigated the impact of cj in the USA and found it had minimal effect Gilmore 2006 points out that cj is the product of a narrow and privledges part of society |
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Spin doctors |
People that alter stories to make them look better or others look worse in some way - politicians |
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Organisation and bureaucratic routines |
Factors that influence or limit news |