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The News Media Chapter 15
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The News Media Chapter 15. The Evolution of Journalism in the U.S.

Mar 28, 2015

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Page 1: The News Media Chapter 15. The Evolution of Journalism in the U.S.

The News MediaChapter 15

Page 2: The News Media Chapter 15. The Evolution of Journalism in the U.S.

The Evolution of Journalism in

the U.S.

Page 3: The News Media Chapter 15. The Evolution of Journalism in the U.S.

Journalism-the process of collecting and disseminating the news4th Branch of Government-the American MediaAnti-Federalists and the press-fought for freedom of the press in the Bill of RightsEarly partisan press-papers sponsored by the respective partiesWashington’s condemnation of the press-upset over coverage of his battle tactics in the newspapers

Page 4: The News Media Chapter 15. The Evolution of Journalism in the U.S.

Penny press-newspapers supported by advertisingThe sensational and the scandalous-accentuating the sordid side of politicsYellow journalism-oversimplification and sensationalized coverageMuckraking-uncovering scandalRole of corporate profit-papers were careful not to offend advertisersElectronic media supplants newspapers and magazines-politicians begin to use alternatives

Page 5: The News Media Chapter 15. The Evolution of Journalism in the U.S.

The U.S. Media Today

Page 6: The News Media Chapter 15. The Evolution of Journalism in the U.S.

Print press-newspapers, books, newsletter, journals and magazines

Electronic media-radio and television networks and the Internet

Page 7: The News Media Chapter 15. The Evolution of Journalism in the U.S.

Print MediaIncrease in # of journalists covering Washington-2300 to 4100 in last 20 years

Decline of newspaper circulation and readership- drop in readship amongst the youngNewspaper chains and decline in competition 13 chains own 54% of circulation, only 12 cities have competing newspapers

Page 8: The News Media Chapter 15. The Evolution of Journalism in the U.S.

Radio and TelevisionAdvent of radio in early part of the 20th century citizens heard the voice of their leaders for the first timeFDR and the Fireside Chats-calmed citizens about his program and, later, the effects of the warRise of right wing radio in Mid-1980s conservatives uncovered the medium of talk radio to advance their philosophy

Page 9: The News Media Chapter 15. The Evolution of Journalism in the U.S.

• Importance of Television due to increased number of sets and number of cable and commercial networks

• TV versus print-83% of Americans get news from television versus 50% from news

• Role of cable television-taking viewers away from major networks

Page 10: The News Media Chapter 15. The Evolution of Journalism in the U.S.

Niche journalism catering to a specific group of viewers

C-Span-carries congressional business in an unvarnished versionLocal television news growth and lack of substance- more Americans prefer local news coverage to national news but local news lacks substance

Page 11: The News Media Chapter 15. The Evolution of Journalism in the U.S.

The InternetRise of Internet as source of news and information-13% of Americans now claim to get their news from the InternetTraditional news media on Internet national networks and major newspapers now have sites on the InternetU.S. government on Internet all 3 branches and most departments have own site on the Internet

Page 12: The News Media Chapter 15. The Evolution of Journalism in the U.S.

Alternative media on Internet-foreign outlets give international take on the news

Al-Jazerra Middle Eastern version of CNN

Page 13: The News Media Chapter 15. The Evolution of Journalism in the U.S.

National Influence of the Media

What precludes nationally united print medium in U.S. size of country and number of large citiesThe 6 major national newspapers New York Times, Wall Street Journal, USA Today, Christian Science Monitor, Washington Post, LA TimesThe 5 major television networks Fox, ABC, CBS, NBC, CNN

Page 14: The News Media Chapter 15. The Evolution of Journalism in the U.S.

National news magazines Newsweek, Time and U.S. News and World ReportConservative, moderate, liberal news magazines Nation-left New Republic-moderate Weekly Standard-conservativeThe news generation gap (15.3) young gets news from Internet, old gets their news from TV

Page 15: The News Media Chapter 15. The Evolution of Journalism in the U.S.

How the Media Cover

Politicians and Government

Page 16: The News Media Chapter 15. The Evolution of Journalism in the U.S.

How the Press and Public Figures Interact

Press release printed document offering an official comment or positionPress briefing restricted session between a press secretary and the pressPress conference unrestricted session between an elected official and the pressOn background

Page 17: The News Media Chapter 15. The Evolution of Journalism in the U.S.

Deep background info can be attributed to a source Off the record comment may not be printedOn the record comments may be printedMedia manipulation by politicians campaign consultants plan how to present candidates

Politicians bypassing national media media bypassed in favor of releases, talk shows and orchestrated events

Page 18: The News Media Chapter 15. The Evolution of Journalism in the U.S.

Covering the PresidencyFirst among equal branches in coverage- the executive branch because of clarity of focusFDR and the bully pulpit used presidency to shape public opinion and explain actionsRole and history of presidential press secretary-main disseminator of information has only existed since Hoover (1929)Conflict between reporters and the White House over what is news on what gets covered, who gets asked and how and for how long a story gets covered

Page 19: The News Media Chapter 15. The Evolution of Journalism in the U.S.

Negative coverage of the presidencyStudies have shown coverage of the president to be usually unfavorable

George W. Bush and reluctance to face the press only 13 press conferences as compared to hid dad’s 64Scott McClellan Bush press secretary

Page 20: The News Media Chapter 15. The Evolution of Journalism in the U.S.

Covering CongressWhy is it difficult for news media to survey Congress? The size and decentralized nature of CongressNews media focuses on 3 groups in covering Congress1. Leaders of both houses2. Key Committee Chairs3. Local senators and reps ( by local stations )Negative coverage of Congress focuses on conflict between members

Page 21: The News Media Chapter 15. The Evolution of Journalism in the U.S.

Coverage of investigative committee hearings due to scandalsMcCarthy sought the identity of Communists in the governmentEnron and WorldCom came under scrutiny because of their contributions to campaignsAbu Ghraib investigated the treatment of prisoners at Iraqui prison

Page 22: The News Media Chapter 15. The Evolution of Journalism in the U.S.

Media Coverage of Local Elections

News media impact on local elections same as impact on national electionsEffect of increasing nationalization of media chains on local election coverage local issues often omitted

Difficulty of candidates for local office to get coverage because local stations cover their platforms

Page 23: The News Media Chapter 15. The Evolution of Journalism in the U.S.

Investigative Journalism and the Character Issue

Watergate scandal was first major journalistic investigationPublic perception of the press after Watergate-media less description and more prescriptionWoodward and Bernstein-became first investigative journalism’s stars

Page 24: The News Media Chapter 15. The Evolution of Journalism in the U.S.

Voters who get their political info from TV as opposed to print rely on traits rather than issue positions like those who get their info from newspapers

Effect of press assumptions on the character trend in reporting1. Press replaced party as the screening committee for candidates2. Press feel it is their duty to expose candidate’s weaknesses3. Press feels that it is giving the public what it wants and scandal sells

Page 25: The News Media Chapter 15. The Evolution of Journalism in the U.S.

Libel-written defamation of character that injures a person’s reputationNY Times v. Sullivan (1964) defamation not enough, must include maliceActual malice-knowing something is false and acting recklessly in publishing it

Page 26: The News Media Chapter 15. The Evolution of Journalism in the U.S.

Media Bias“Media bias” telling an untruth, part of the truth or out of contextCharacteristics of reporters fallible humans who have values, preferences and attitudesCorporate bias of the media-media with corporate connections showed pro-business biasFailure of national media to question the Bush administration’s false claims of WMDs and tied to terrorism before Iraq invasion charged by media critics-read page 565

Page 27: The News Media Chapter 15. The Evolution of Journalism in the U.S.

Effect of increasing fragmentation and competition in media on bias is becoming intentionalIdeological fragmentation of media media no longer hide their biasIdeological Web sites on the Internet feature tailored content

Page 28: The News Media Chapter 15. The Evolution of Journalism in the U.S.

The Media’s Influence on the Public

Page 29: The News Media Chapter 15. The Evolution of Journalism in the U.S.

Effect of media on the public press has little effect in most cases because “people see what they want to see”What limits ability of news media to sway public opinion people’s own bias

Media effects-the influence of news sources on public opinion

Page 30: The News Media Chapter 15. The Evolution of Journalism in the U.S.

How media-influenced changes might occur1-uncommitted people can be swayed2-media has greater impact on foreign stories3-media can determine the topic of the day4-media shapes public’s perceptions of a candidate5-may determine outcome of election with premature projections6-may spotlight a negative aspect of domestic picture (economy in 1992)

Page 31: The News Media Chapter 15. The Evolution of Journalism in the U.S.

Increasing Use of ExpertsWhat influences use of experts

What impact experts have on shaping American views

What guarantees of reliability of experts

Page 32: The News Media Chapter 15. The Evolution of Journalism in the U.S.

The Public’s Perception of

the Media

Page 33: The News Media Chapter 15. The Evolution of Journalism in the U.S.

Low public confidence in news media only 11% report confidence in the mediaCredibility ratings for national news media public identifies them as biased and sensationalCredibility of TV versus print media Broadcast media get higher marks than print media

Page 34: The News Media Chapter 15. The Evolution of Journalism in the U.S.

Top problems facing journalism quality of coverage for national journalists and financial problems for local journalistsFox News vs. CNN-Fox more favorable in evaluations of Bush-page 573

Nonprofit organizations research on media-Accuracy in Media and FAIR (Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting) keep track of media accuracy

Page 35: The News Media Chapter 15. The Evolution of Journalism in the U.S.

Government Regulation of the Electronic

Media

Page 36: The News Media Chapter 15. The Evolution of Journalism in the U.S.

2 reasons for unequal treatment of print and broadcast media 1. Airwaves are considered public property 2. Airwaves are in limited supply

1996 Telecommunications Act-deregulation brought together different types of mediums and helped form media giants such as ComcastFCC-Federal Communications Commission-responsible for policing the media

2003 changes by FCC on media diversity-corporations could now own different kinds of media in different markets

Page 37: The News Media Chapter 15. The Evolution of Journalism in the U.S.

2003 changes on ownership-newspapers could own radio and TV stations and vice versa

FCC on limits on total national audience a corporation may reach-audience increased from 35% to 45%Effects of deregulation-corporations could monopolize the media and there was a decrease in competitionOpposition to deregulation-bipartisan opposition-conservatives see immoral use of the media-liberals fear loss of community based media

Page 38: The News Media Chapter 15. The Evolution of Journalism in the U.S.

Content RegulationContent regulation-must serve “public interest”Equal time rule-must sell air time equally to all candidates if they wish to at all2000 FCC rule on chance to respond-stations must allow candidates time to respond to attacks by the stationFairness doctrine-broadcasters must cover events adequately and must allow for contrasting opinions

Page 39: The News Media Chapter 15. The Evolution of Journalism in the U.S.

Red Lion Broadcasting v FCC case supported the fairness doctrine-man attacked on show and asked for opportunity to respondReagan’s FCC abolishes fairness doctrine arguing that the # of stations could provide diversity of opinionReagan veto of new fairness doctrine bill on grounds that it violated freedom of press

Page 40: The News Media Chapter 15. The Evolution of Journalism in the U.S.

Efforts to Regulate Media Practices

Prior restraint-telling the press what they may not print ahead of timePentagon Papers-classified papers about the Vietnam War stolen by Daniel EllsbergNew York Times v U.S.-court ruled that only a free press could …expose deception in the government.

Page 41: The News Media Chapter 15. The Evolution of Journalism in the U.S.

1991 Gulf War and “Vietnam Syndrome” thought that media’s freedom to frame events caused popular resistance

2003 Iraq invasion and “imbedded journalists”Journalists assigned to and travel with fighting units

Demise of freedom through corporation consolidation of media outlets caused by lack of competition

Page 42: The News Media Chapter 15. The Evolution of Journalism in the U.S.

Efforts to Regulate Media Practices Around the World

Media in dictatorships only “approved messages releasedMedia in constitutional democracies have mutually beneficial relationship with royal families Media in Middle East-best served by Al-Jazeera with satellite and web coverageBBC- British Broadcasting Company-owned by country and subject to strict regulations on release of government secrets D-notice-when British media submit questionable content for government approval