1 / 8

E.W. SCRIPPS

E.W. SCRIPPS. “People’s Champion” -- felt a responsibility to working people. “I have only one principle, and that is represented by an effort to make it harder for the rich to grow richer and easier for the poor to keep from growing poorer.”. How it started ….

friedmanc
Download Presentation

E.W. SCRIPPS

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. E.W. SCRIPPS “People’s Champion” -- felt a responsibility to working people. “I have only one principle, and that is represented by an effort to make it harder for the rich to grow richer and easier for the poor to keep from growing poorer.”

  2. How it started … In 1878, Edward W. Scripps borrowed $10,000 from his brothers to set off America's first information revolution. With a loan from his brother, the young entrepreneur launched a newspaper in Cleveland aimed at an emerging - but yet unserved - mass audience of urban workers. From Cleveland, he took the formula to dozens of other cities, building the first chain of newspapers under common ownership. Cleveland Press – 1878 Cincinnati Post -- 1883

  3. The Day Book • Adless tabloid • An effort to provide journalism untainted by commercial pressure • Reached $25,000 circulation • Within $500 a month of being in the black    • Price of newsprint (paper) during WWI went up so much that it killed The Day Book          1911 Carl Sandburg—Chief Reporter

  4. Scripps was unusual – a true believer in worker’s rights. • Fought for the right for workers to organize through unions • Crusaded for public ownership and against utility abuses • Attacked political bossism and corruption • Supported anti-monopoly reforms through Theodore Roosevelt’s candidacy as a third party candidate • Closer to being “labor” papers than any other general circulation newspapers • Also won support of intellectual liberals who Scripps sometimes tried to avoid.

  5. Some other lessons about the rise of newspapers. • The commercial aspect of newspapers gave them independence from political parties. • The business of selling newspapers has always pushed, to some extent, tawdry aspects of news coverage. • All newspapers require advertising to make a profit so no newspaper is independent of business pressures.

  6. The Chinese Wall • Why “Chinese”? I don’t know. • It means an invisible wall between the business side of newspapers and the journalism side. • Advertisers are not supposed to influence reporters, editors and so forth.

  7. The Liberal Media • A myth has been purposely spread since the 1960s that the news media has a liberal bias. • Objective analysis of news does not support this. • Some media critics like Ben Bagdikian claim that media does have a bias – it favors the powerful and generally has a pro-corporate slant. • Objective analysis provides evidence that supports this thesis. • www.washingtonmonthly.com/features/2006/0603.waldman.html

  8. What is important in a news story? • Timeliness. Hard news is new news. • Accuracy. Not the same as truth, but reporters ought to at least get the facts right. • Relevance. Issues important to our well being. • Sources. Who says what in a story is as important as accuracy. • Truth. The best stories go beyond mere accuracy and inform us about the big issues.

More Related