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The Culture of Journalism

The Culture of Journalism. Chapter 14. “The government’s power to censor the press was abolished so that the press would remain forever free to censure the government. The press was protected so that it could bare the secrets of the government and inform the people.” —Justice Hugo Black, 1971.

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The Culture of Journalism

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  1. The Culture of Journalism Chapter 14

  2. “The government’s power to censor the press was abolished so that the press would remain forever free to censure the government. The press was protected so that it could bare the secrets of the government and inform the people.”—Justice Hugo Black, 1971

  3. “A journalist…is there to watch over the safety and the welfare of the people who trust him.”—Joseph Pulitzer

  4. Information Glut • Social critic Neil Postman • As a result of developments in media technology: • Too much information • Too many channels • Causes stress • News comes too late for people to act • Public alienation • Public passivity

  5. “The ‘information’ the modern media provide leaves people feeling useless not because it’s so bleak but because it’s so trivial.”—Susan Faludi

  6. Newsworthiness • What is news and what is not? • Gatekeeper function of media • Conflict • Prominence • Human interest • Consequence • Usefulness • Deviant...the bizarre • News in the 20th century helps the public make sense of prominent people, important events, and unusual happenings in everyday life.

  7. American Journalism Values • General belief that journalists should present news from neutral standpoint • Herbert Gans: media sociologist • Media claims for balance • Gans offers four subjective beliefs that shape news judgments: • Ethnocentrism • Responsible capitalism • Small-town pastoralism • Individualism • Reporters as neutral “channels” of information • As opposed to citizens actively involved in public life

  8. Absolutist ethics Situational ethics Role of deception(Nellie Bly) SPJcode Journalism Ethics

  9. Ethical Dilemmas • Deploying deception • Is truth the only goal? • Invading privacy • Microphone in the face of the bereaved • Going through someone’s trash • Conflict of interest • Any situation where a journalist may stand to benefit personally from the story he produces • SPJ code warns against accepting gifts or favors.

  10. Society of Professional Journalists(SPJ)Code of Ethics on p. 496

  11. Reporting Rituals • Cult of the new • Immediacy of the present • Origins in print • 1840s rise of telegraph • Old news doesn’t run. • Thus, news often lacks historical context. • Don Hewitt: “Tell me a story.” • Getting the story first (scoop) • Herd journalism • Reliance on experts

  12. Rituals (cont.) • “Balance” • Two-dimensionality of news • Helps generate story conflict • Misrepresents the multifaceted complexity of social issues • Adversarial relationship between prominent leaders and major institutions • Gotcha story • Tough-questioning style • Becomes an end in itself • Reporter located between “them” and “us” • Might be better to improve the quality of political discussions by asking, “Why is this going on?” and “What ought to be done about it?”

  13. Print vs. Television • TV journalism’s origins in print • Edward R. Murrow • TV driven by its technology • Going “live for live’s sake” • The image is everything • Broadcast format forces compression • TV journalists become celebrities • Sound bite news

  14. Bias and the News • A June 2006 Harris Poll found 38 percent of adults detect a liberal bias in news coverage, while 25 percent sense a conservative bias. • Can a news story ever be truly unbiased?

  15. Public Journalism • News accepts broader mission • No longer detached • Suggests policy alternatives • Recasts public as actors alive in the process • Intended to combat alienation • Not a substitute for investigative work

  16. Critics • Fear that public journalism panders • Fear losing credibility built up over decades of “objective” reporting • Removes traditional editorial role • Changes reporting style to conversational • No balance • Just a marketing facade

  17. Fake News and Satiric Journalism • Appeals to many cynical young people • Critiques the unimaginative quality of traditional news stories • The Daily Show and The Colbert Report • Is it time for journalism to break free from tired formulas? • “There’s no journalist today, real or fake, who is more significant for people 18 to 25.” –-Seth Siegel, advertising and branding consultant, on Jon Stewart

  18. Online News • “Mainstream media need to search for the right business model that integrates the online experience into what they do.” —John Horrigan, Pew Internet & American Life Project, 2006

  19. Role of Reporting • Social responsibility: James Agee, Let Us Now Praise Famous Men • Deliberative democracy: journalists should be activists for public life • Representative democracy • Deliberative democracy

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