1 / 28

Newspapers: The Rise and Decline of Modern Journalism

Newspapers: The Rise and Decline of Modern Journalism. Chapter 8.

mattox
Download Presentation

Newspapers: The Rise and Decline of Modern Journalism

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. Newspapers: The Rise and Decline of Modern Journalism Chapter 8

  2. “A lifetime champion of women and the poor, Nellie Bly pioneered what was then called detective or stunt journalism. Her work inspired the twentieth-century practice of investigative journalism—from Ida Tarbell’s exposés of oil corporations in the early 1900s to the 2008 Pulitzer Prize for investigative reporting...”

  3. Newspapers Today • Newspapers have historically acted as chroniclers of daily life. • Inform and entertain • In the digital age, the industry is losing papers and readers. • 2007—Total newspaper ad revenues fell 7% overall, despite 20% increase in online ad sales. • Losses raise big concerns for future of newspaper’s.

  4. The Evolution of American Newspapers • Colonial papers • Benjamin Harris: Publick Occurrences (1690) • Inflammatory by standards of the times • Not a newspaper by modern standards • Banned by the colony after one issue • John Campbell: the Boston News-Letter (1704) • Reported on mundane events that took place in Europe months earlier • James Franklin: the New England Courant (1721) • Stories that interested ordinary readers

  5. Colonial Papers (cont.) • Benjamin Franklin: the Pennsylvania Gazette (1729) • Historians rate among the best • Run with subsidies from political parties as well as advertising • John Peter Zenger: the New-York Weekly Journal (1733) • Arrested for seditious libel • Jury ruled in his favor, as long as stories are true. • Decision provided foundation for First Amendment. • By 1765, about thirty newspapers in American colonies

  6. Partisan Press • 1784—first daily newspaper • Two types: political and commercial • Parties shaped press history. • Anti–British rule • Political agendas shaped newspapers. • Partisan press forerunner of editorials • Commercial press forerunner of the modern business section • Circulation in hundreds, not thousands • Readership: the wealthy and educated

  7. Penny Press • 1833—Benjamin Day’s New York Sun • Local events, scandals, and police reports • Blazed the trail for celebrity news • Fabricated stories • Human-interest stories • Ordinary individuals facing extraordinary challenges • Success spawned wave of penny papers.

  8. Penny Press (cont.) • 1835—James Gordon Bennett’s New York Morning Herald • Bennett first U.S. press baron • World’s largest daily paper at the time • Model for Dickens’s Rowdy Journal • Penny papers increased reliance on ad revenue. • 1848—formation of the Associated Press (AP) • Wire services around the country

  9. Penny Press Contributions • Developed a system of information distribution • Modern technology to mass-produce and cut costs • Wire services • Promoted literacy among the public • Middle- and working-class readers could afford the papers and were attracted to true-crime and human-interest stories. • Empowered the public in government affairs • Articles about politics and commerce

  10. YellowJournalism • Pulitzer and Hearst • Brazen • Sensational, overly dramatic • Crimes • Celebrities • Scandals • Disaster • Intrigue • Provided roots for investigative journalism • Exposed corruption in business and government

  11. Pulitzer and the New York World • Hungarian immigrant • Bought the St. Louis Post-Dispatch • Touted as a “national conscience” • 1883—bought the New York World • Pro-immigrant and working class • Sensational stories • Advice columns and women’s pages • Antimonopoly • Manufactured events and staged stunts • E.g., Nellie Bly around the world in 72 days • Legacy: Gave money to start Columbia U’s graduate school of journalism and launched the Pulitzer Prizes

  12. Hearst and the New York Journal • Expelled from Harvard • Had taken reins of San Francisco Examiner • Bought the New York Journal with his inheritance • Ailing penny paper owned by Joseph Pulitzer’s brother • Raided Joseph Pulitzer’s New York World for editors, writers, and cartoonists • Imitated Pulitzer’s style • Pro-immigrant • Bold layout • Sensational stories • Invented interviews, faked pictures, encouraged conflicts • Hearst served as model for Charles Foster Kane.

  13. Competing Models of Print Journalism • Objectivity • Ochs and the New York Times, 1896 • Distanced itself from yellow journalism • Focused on documentation of major events • More affluent readership • Lowered the price to a penny, so middle class read as marker for educated and well-informed • Inverted-pyramid style • Answer who, what, where, when (sometimes why and how)at top • Less significant details at bottom

  14. Can news ever be objective? Are facts alone enough? What do we need from newspapers? Limits of Objectivity

  15. Interpretive Journalism • More analysis • 1920s editor and columnist Walter Lippmann • Ranked press responsibilities • Supply facts for the record • Give analysis • Advocate plans • 1930s: Depression and Nazi threat to global stability helped analysis take root.

  16. Literary Forms of Journalism • Literary journalism • Also called “new journalism” • Fictional storytelling techniques applied to nonfictional material • 19th century: Mark Twain, Stephen Crane, Theodore Dreiser • 20th century: Tom Wolfe, Truman Capote, Joan Didion, Norman Mailer, Hunter S. Thompson • Advocacy journalism • Reporter promotes particular cause or view • Precision journalism • Pushes news in the direction of science

  17. Newspapers Undergo Change • USA Today • Color • Mimics broadcast news in use of brief news items • Online journalism changes the news landscape. • January 1998: The Drudge Report broke Lewinsky story before Newsweek. • Reduced standards for journalistic accuracy?

  18. Newspapers Play Different Roles • Smaller nondaily papers promote social, economic harmony in community. • Consensus-oriented journalism: carry stories on local schools, social events, town government, property crimes, and zoning issues • National and metro dailies practice different style. • Conflict-oriented journalism: front-page news defined as events, issues, or experiences that deviate from social norms

  19. Minority Newspapers • African American • Freedom’s Journal (1827–1829), New York’s Amsterdam News • Spanish-language • New York’s El Diario–La Prensa merged with Los Angeles’ La Opinión in 2004. • Vital to marketing and publicity campaigns, growing fast • Asian American • The World Journal: serves Chinese immigrants nationwide • Native American • Begun with Cherokee Phoenix (1828)

  20. The Underground Press • Inspired by socialists, intellectuals from 1930s, 1940s • Dorothy Day, I. F. Stone • Mid to late 1960s saw explosion in alternative newspapers. • Worked to challenge mainstream depictions of news • Village Voice: one of the first, most enduring alternative papers • Circulation of 250,000 today

  21. Figure 8.1

  22. Economic Demands vs. Editorial Opportunities • Newshole = 35 to 50% of paper • Remaining space devoted to advertising • Newsroom staff • Publisher and owner • Editors • Reporters • Photographers • Copy editors • Wire services and feature syndicates important sources of material • Staff cannot possibly produce enough or cover the world.

  23. Ownership, Economics, Technology, and Innovation • Decline in readership • End of competing newspapers in cities • Joint operating agreement (JOA) • Two newspapers keep separate news divisions while merging business and production operations. • In 2007, JOAs were still in place in 10 cities. • Newspaper chains • Gannett nation’s largest • Rupert Murdoch’s News Corp. multinational

  24. What Gannett Owns – Texas-New Mexico Newspaper Partnership (41%, community newspapers) Television • Captivate Network (advertising-based television in elevators) • 23 TV stations – KARE-TV (Minneapolis) – KNAZ-TV (Flagstaff, Ariz.) – KSDK-TV (St. Louis) – KTHV-TV (Little Rock, Ark.) – KTVD-TV (Denver) – KUSA-TV (Denver) – KXTV-TV (Sacramento, Calif.) – WATL-TV (Atlanta) – WBIR-TV (Knoxville, Tenn.) – WCSH-TV (Portland, Me.) – WGRZ-TV (Buffalo, N.Y.) – WJXX-TV (Jacksonville) – WKYC-TV (Cleveland) – WTLV-TV (Jacksonville) – WTSP-TV (Tampa) – WZZM-TV (Grand Rapids, Mich.) Internet • CareerBuilder (40%) • Classified Ventures (24%, online content publishing) • Planet Discover • ShopLocal.com (42%) • Topix.net Magazines and Printing • Clipper Magazine (direct mail advertising) • Gannett Healthcare Group (periodical publishing) • Gannett Offset (commercial printing) Newspapers • 85 daily papers and 900 nondaily publications – USA Today – USA Weekend – Asbury Park Press (N.J.) – Detroit Free Press – Rochester Democrat and Chronicle (NY) – Arizona Republic (Phoenix) – Cincinnati Enquirer – Courier-Journal (Louisville, Ky.) – Des Moines Register (Iowa) – Honolulu Advertiser – Indianapolis Star – News Journal (Wilmington, Del.) – Tennessean (Nashville) – Army Times Publishing Company (newspapers) – Newsquest plc (newspaper publishing, United Kingdom)

  25. Electronic and Digital Technology • Hundreds of newspapers have developed online versions of their paper product. • Online newspapers flexible • Unlimited space • Links to related articles • Archives • Multimedia capabilities • Free of charge

  26. “Now, like hundreds of other mid-career journalists who are walking away from media institutions across the country, I’m looking for other ways to tell the stories I care about. At the same time, the world of online news is maturing, looking for depth and context. I think the timing couldn’t be better.” —Nancy Cleeland, on why she was leaving The Los Angeles Times, posted on The Huffington Post, 2007

  27. Journalists Face Risks Abroad • By mid-2008, more than 125 reporters had died in Iraq. • “The danger is omnipresent for journalists in Iraq. There are few places to take refuge.” —Joel Campagna, Committee to Protect Journalists, 2006

  28. The Newspapers’ Survival • Can newspapers compete with television and the Internet? • How can print journalism adjust its business model to survive?

More Related