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News

News is information about current events. This may be provided through many different media: word of mouth, printing, postal systems, broadcasting, electronic communication, or through the testimony of observers and witnesses to events. News is sometimes called "hard news" to differentiate it from soft media.

Al Jazeera English newsroom, Doha, 2011

Common topics for news reports include war, government, politics, education, health, the environment, economy, business, fashion, entertainment, and sport, as well as quirky or unusual events. Government proclamations, concerning royal ceremonies, laws, taxes, public health, and criminals, have been dubbed news since ancient times. Technological and social developments, often driven by government communication and espionage networks, have increased the speed with which news can spread, as well as influenced its content.

Throughout history, people have transported new information through oral means. Having developed in China over centuries, newspapers became established in Europe during the early modern period. In the 20th century, radio and television became an important means of transmitting news. Whilst in the 21st, the internet has also begun to play a similar role.

Meaning

Etymology

The English word "news" developed in the 14th century as a special use of the plural form of "new". In Middle English, the equivalent word was newes, like the French nouvelles and the German Neues. Similar developments are found in the Slavic languages – namely cognates from Serbo-Croatian novost (from nov, "new"), Czech and Slovak noviny (from nový, "new"), the Polish nowiny, the Bulgarian novini and Russian novosti – and likewise in the Celtic languages: the Welsh newyddion (from newydd) and the Cornish nowodhow (from nowydh).[1][2]

Jessica Garretson Finch is credited with coining the phrase "current events" while teaching at Barnard College in the 1890s.[3]

Newness

As its name implies, "news" typically connotes the presentation of new information.[4][5] The newness of news gives it an uncertain quality which distinguishes it from the more careful investigations of history or other scholarly disciplines.[5][6][7] Whereas historians tend to view events as causally related manifestations of underlying processes, news stories tend to describe events in isolation, and to exclude discussion of the relationships between them.[8] News conspicuously describes the world in the present or immediate past, even when the most important aspects of a news story have occurred long in the past—or are expected to occur in the future. To make the news, an ongoing process must have some "peg", an event in time that anchors it to the present moment.[8][9] Relatedly, news often addresses aspects of reality which seem unusual, deviant, or out of the ordinary.[10] Hence the famous dictum that "Dog Bites Man" is not news, but "Man Bites Dog" is.[11]

Another corollary of the newness of news is that, as new technology enables new media to disseminate news more quickly, 'slower' forms of communication may move away from 'news' towards 'analysis'.[12]

Commodity

According to some theories, "news" is whatever the news industry sells.[13] Journalism, broadly understood along the same lines, is the act or occupation of collecting and providing news.[14][15] From a commercial perspective, news is simply one input, along with paper (or an electronic server) necessary to prepare a final product for distribution.[16] A news agency supplies this resource "wholesale" and publishers enhance it for retail.[17][18]

Tone

Most purveyors of news value impartiality, neutrality, and objectivity, despite the inherent difficulty of reporting without political bias.[19] Perception of these values has changed greatly over time as sensationalized 'tabloid journalism' has risen in popularity. Michael Schudson has argued that before the era of World War I and the concomitant rise of propaganda, journalists were not aware of the concept of bias in reporting, let alone actively correcting for it.[20] News is also sometimes said to portray the truth, but this relationship is elusive and qualified.[21]

Paradoxically, another property commonly attributed to news is sensationalism, the disproportionate focus on, and exaggeration of, emotive stories for public consumption.[22][23] This news is also not unrelated to gossip, the human practice of sharing information about other humans of mutual interest.[24] A common sensational topic is violence; hence another news dictum, "if it bleeds, it leads".[25]

Newsworthiness

Newsworthiness is defined as a subject having sufficient relevance to the public or a special audience to warrant press attention or coverage.[26]

News values seem to be common across cultures. People seem to be interested in news to the extent which it has a big impact, describes conflicts, happens nearby, involves well-known people, and deviates from the norms of everyday happenings.[27] War is a common news topic, partly because it involves unknown events that could pose personal danger.[28]

History

Folk news

Evidence suggests that cultures around the world have found a place for people to share stories about interesting new information. Among Zulus, Mongolians, Polynesians, and American Southerners, anthropologists have documented the practice of questioning travelers for news as a matter of priority.[29] Sufficiently important news would be repeated quickly and often, and could spread by word of mouth over a large geographic area.[30] Even as printing presses came into use in Europe, news for the general public often travelled orally via monks, travelers, town criers, etc.[31]

The news is also transmitted in public gathering places, such as the Greek forum and the Roman baths. Starting in England, coffeehouses served as important sites for the spread of news, even after telecommunications became widely available. The history of the coffee houses is traced from Arab countries, which was introduced in England in the 16th century.[32] In the Muslim world, people have gathered and exchanged news at mosques and other social places. Travelers on pilgrimages to Mecca traditionally stay at caravanserais, roadside inns, along the way, and these places have naturally served as hubs for gaining news of the world.[33] In late medieval Britain, reports ("tidings") of major events were a topic of great public interest, as chronicled in Chaucer's 1380 The House of Fame and other works.[34]

Government proclamations

 
Woodcut by Tommaso Garzoni depicting a town crier with a trumpet

Before the invention of newspapers in the early 17th century, official government bulletins and edicts were circulated at times in some centralized empires.[35] The first documented use of an organized courier service for the diffusion of written documents is in Egypt, where Pharaohs used couriers for the diffusion of their decrees in the territory of the State (2400 BC).[36] Julius Caesar regularly publicized his heroic deeds in Gaul, and upon becoming dictator of Rome began publishing government announcements called Acta Diurna. These were carved in metal or stone and posted in public places.[37][38] In medieval England, parliamentary declarations were delivered to sheriffs for public display and reading at the market.[39]

Specially sanctioned messengers have been recognized in Vietnamese culture, among the Khasi people in India, and in the Fox and Winnebago cultures of the American midwest. The Zulu Kingdom used runners to quickly disseminate news. In West Africa, news can be spread by griots. In most cases, the official spreaders of news have been closely aligned with holders of political power.[40]

Town criers were a common means of conveying information to citydwellers. In thirteenth-century Florence, criers known as banditori arrived in the market regularly, to announce political news, to convoke public meetings, and to call the populace to arms. In 1307 and 1322–1325, laws were established governing their appointment, conduct, and salary. These laws stipulated how many times a banditoro was to repeat a proclamation (forty) and where in the city they were to read them.[41] Different declarations sometimes came with additional protocols; announcements regarding the plague were also to be read at the city gates.[42] These proclamations all used a standard format, beginning with an exordium—"The worshipful and most esteemed gentlemen of the Eight of Ward and Security of the city of Florence make it known, notify, and expressly command, to whosoever, of whatever status, rank, quality and condition"—and continuing with a statement (narratio), a request made upon the listeners (petitio), and the penalty to be exacted from those who would not comply (peroratio).[43] In addition to major declarations, bandi (announcements) might concern petty crimes, requests for information, and notices about missing slaves.[44] Niccolò Machiavelli was captured by the Medicis in 1513, following a bando calling for his immediate surrender.[45] Some town criers could be paid to include advertising along with news.[46]

Under the Ottoman Empire, official messages were regularly distributed at mosques, by traveling holy men, and by secular criers. These criers were sent to read official announcements in marketplaces, highways, and other well-traveled places, sometimes issuing commands and penalties for disobedience.[47]

Early news networks

The spread of news has always been linked to the communications networks in place to disseminate it. Thus, political, religious, and commercial interests have historically controlled, expanded, and monitored communications channels by which news could spread. Postal services have long been closely entwined with the maintenance of political power in a large area.[48][49]

One of the imperial communication channels, called the "Royal Road" traversed the Assyrian Empire and served as a key source of its power.[50] The Roman Empire maintained a vast network of roads, known as cursus publicus, for similar purposes.[51]

Visible chains of long-distance signaling, known as optical telegraphy, have also been used throughout history to convey limited types of information. These can have ranged from smoke and fire signals to advanced systems using semaphore codes and telescopes.[52][53] The latter form of optical telegraph came into use in Japan, Britain, France, and Germany from the 1790s through the 1850s.[54][55]

Asia

 
Reproduction of Kaiyuan Za Bao court newspaper from the Tang dynasty

The world's first written news may have originated in eighth century BCE China, where reports gathered by officials were eventually compiled as the Spring and Autumn Annals. The annals, whose compilation is attributed to Confucius, were available to a sizeable reading public and dealt with common news themes—though they straddle the line between news and history.[56] The Han dynasty is credited with developing one of the most effective imperial surveillance and communications networks in the ancient world.[57] Government-produced news sheets, called tipao, circulated among court officials during the late Han dynasty (second and third centuries AD). Between 713 and 734, the Kaiyuan Za Bao ("Bulletin of the Court") of the Chinese Tang Dynasty published government news; it was handwritten on silk and read by government officials.[58] The court created a Bureau of Official Reports (Jin Zhouyuan) to centralize news distribution for the court.[59] Newsletters called ch'ao pao continued to be produced and gained wider public circulation in the following centuries.[60] In 1582 there was the first reference to privately published newssheets in Beijing, during the late Ming Dynasty.[61][62]

Japan had effective communications and postal delivery networks at several points in its history, first in 646 with the Taika Reform and again during the Kamakura period from 1183 to 1333. The system depended on hikyaku, runners, and regularly spaced relay stations. By this method, news could travel between Kyoto and Kamakura in 5–7 days. Special horse-mounted messengers could move information at the speed of 170 kilometers per day.[55][63] The Japanese shogunates were less tolerant than the Chinese government of news circulation.[58] The postal system established during the Edo period was even more effective, with average speeds of 125–150 km/day and express speed of 200 km/day. This system was initially used only by the government, taking private communications only at exorbitant prices. Private services emerged and in 1668 established their own nakama (guild). They became even faster, and created an effective optical telegraphy system using flags by day and lanterns and mirrors by night.[55]

Europe

In Europe, during the Middle Ages, elites relied on runners to transmit news over long distances. At 33 kilometres per day, a runner would take two months to bring a message across the Hanseatic League from Bruges to Riga.[64][65] In the early modern period, increased cross-border interaction created a rising need for information which was met by concise handwritten newssheets. The driving force of this new development was the commercial advantage provided by up-to-date news.[7][66]

In 1556, the government of Venice first published the monthly Notizie scritte, which cost one gazetta.[67] These avvisi were handwritten newsletters and used to convey political, military, and economic news quickly and efficiently to Italian cities (1500–1700)—sharing some characteristics of newspapers though usually not considered true newspapers.[68] Avvisi were sold by subscription under the auspices of military, religious, and banking authorities. Sponsorship flavored the contents of each series, which were circulated under many different names. Subscribers included clerics, diplomatic staff, and noble families. By the last quarter of the seventeenth century, long passages from avvisi were finding their way into published monthlies such as the Mercure de France and, in northern Italy, Pallade veneta.[69][70][71]

 
Some European postal routes in 1563

Postal services enabled merchants and monarchs to stay abreast of important information. For the Holy Roman Empire, Emperor Maximillian I in 1490 authorized two brothers from the Italian Tasso family, Francesco and Janetto, to create a network of courier stations linked by riders. They began with a communications line between Innsbruck and Mechelen and grew from there.[72] In 1505 this network expanded to Spain, new governed by Maximilian's son Philip. These riders could travel 180 kilometers in a day.[73] This system became the Imperial Reichspost, administered by Tasso descendants (subsequently known as Thurn-und-Taxis), who in 1587 received exclusive operating rights from the Emperor.[72] The French postal service and English postal service also began at this time, but did not become comprehensive until the early 1600s.[72][74][75] In 1620, the English system linked with Thurn-und-Taxis.[53]

These connections underpinned an extensive system of news circulation, with handwritten items bearing dates and places of origin. Centred in Germany, the network took in news from Russia, the Balkans, Italy, Britain, France, and the Netherlands.[76] The German lawyer Christoph von Scheurl and the Fugger house of Augsburg were prominent hubs in this network.[77] Letters describing historically significant events could gain wide circulation as news reports. Indeed, personal correspondence sometimes acted only as a convenient channel through which news could flow across a larger network.[78] A common type of business communication was a simple listing of current prices, the circulation of which quickened the flow of international trade.[79][80] Businesspeople also wanted to know about events related to shipping, the affairs of other businesses, and political developments.[79] Even after the advent of international newspapers, business owners still valued correspondence highly as a source of reliable news that would affect their enterprise.[81] Handwritten newsletters, which could be produced quickly for a limited clientele, also continued into the 1600s.[77]

Rise of the newspaper

 
The London Gazette, "Published By Authority" (of the Stationers' Company) on 3 December 1909

The spread of paper and the printing press from China to Europe preceded a major advance in the transmission of news.[82] With the spread of printing presses and the creation of new markets in the 1500s, news underwent a shift from factual and precise economic reporting, to a more emotive and freewheeling format. (Private newsletters containing important intelligence therefore remained in use by people who needed to know.)[83] The first newspapers emerged in Germany in the early 1600s.[84] Relation aller Fürnemmen und gedenckwürdigen Historien, from 1605, is recognized as the world's first formalized 'newspaper';[85] while not a 'newspaper' in the modern sense, the Ancient Roman Acta Diurna served a similar purpose circa 131 BC.

The new format, which mashed together numerous unrelated and perhaps dubious reports from far-flung locations, created a radically new and jarring experience for its readers.[86] A variety of styles emerged, from single-story tales, to compilations, overviews, and personal and impersonal types of news analysis.[87]

News for public consumption was at first tightly controlled by governments. By 1530, England had created a licensing system for the press and banned "seditious opinions".[88] Under the Licensing Act, publication was restricted to approved presses—as exemplified by The London Gazette, which prominently bore the words: "Published By Authority".[89] Parliament allowed the Licensing Act to lapse in 1695, beginning a new era marked by Whig and Tory newspapers.[90] (During this era, the Stamp Act limited newspaper distribution simply by making them expensive to sell and buy.) In France, censorship was even more constant.[91] Consequently, many Europeans read newspapers originating from beyond their national borders—especially from the Dutch Republic, where publishers could evade state censorship.[92]

The new United States saw a newspaper boom beginning with the Revolutionary era, accelerated by spirited debates over the establishment of a new government, spurred on by subsidies contained in the 1792 Postal Service Act, and continuing into the 1800s.[93][94] American newspapers got many of their stories by copying reports from each other. Thus by offering free postage to newspapers wishing to exchange copies, the Postal Service Act subsidized a rapidly growing news network through which different stories could percolate.[95] Newspapers thrived during the colonization of the West, fueled by high literacy and a newspaper-loving culture.[96] By 1880, San Francisco rivaled New York in number of different newspapers and in printed newspaper copies per capita.[97] Boosters of new towns felt that newspapers covering local events brought legitimacy, recognition, and community.[98] The 1830s American, wrote Alexis de Tocqueville, was "a very civilized man prepared for a time to face life in the forest, plunging into the wilderness of the New World with his Bible, ax, and newspapers."[99] In France, the Revolution brought forth an abundance of newspapers and a new climate of press freedom, followed by a return to repression under Napoleon.[100] In 1792 the Revolutionaries set up a news ministry called the Bureau d'Esprit.[101]

Some newspapers published in the 1800s and after retained the commercial orientation characteristic of the private newsletters of the Renaissance. Economically oriented newspapers published new types of data enabled the advent of statistics, especially economic statistics which could inform sophisticated investment decisions.[102] These newspapers, too, became available for larger sections of society, not just elites, keen on investing some of their savings in the stock markets. Yet, as in the case other newspapers, the incorporation of advertising into the newspaper led to justified reservations about accepting newspaper information at face value.[103] Economic newspapers also became promoters of economic ideologies, such as Keynesianism in the mid-1900s.[104]

Newspapers came to sub-Saharan Africa via colonization. The first English-language newspaper in the area was The Royal Gazette and Sierra Leone Advertiser, established in 1801, and followed by The Royal Gold Coast Gazette and Commercial Intelligencer in 1822 and the Liberia Herald in 1826.[105] A number of nineteenth-century African newspapers were established by missionaries.[106] These newspapers by and large promoted the colonial governments and served the interests of European settlers by relaying news from Europe.[106] The first newspaper published in a native African language was the Muigwithania, published in Kikuyu by the Kenyan Central Association.[106] Muigwithania and other newspapers published by indigenous Africans took strong opposition stances, agitating strongly for African independence.[107] Newspapers were censored heavily during the colonial period—as well as after formal independence. Some liberalization and diversification took place in the 1990s.[108]

Newspapers were slow to spread to the Arab world, which had a stronger tradition of oral communication, and mistrust of the European approach to news reporting. By the end of the eighteenth century, the Ottoman Empire's leaders in Istanbul monitored the European press, but its contents were not disseminated for mass consumption.[109] Some of the first written news in modern North Africa arose in Egypt under Muhammad Ali, who developed the local paper industry and initiated the limited circulation of news bulletins called jurnals.[110] Beginning in the 1850s and 1860s, the private press began to develop in the multi-religious country of Lebanon.[111]

Newswire

The development of the electrical telegraph, which often travelled along railroad lines, enabled news to travel faster, over longer distances.[112] (Days before Morse's Baltimore–Washington line transmitted the famous question, "What hath God wrought?", it transmitted the news that Henry Clay and Theodore Frelinghuysen had been chosen by the Whig nominating party.)[37] Telegraph networks enabled a new centralization of the news, in the hands of wire services concentrated in major cities. The modern form of these originated with Charles-Louis Havas, who founded Bureau Havas (later Agence France-Presse) in Paris. Havas began in 1832, using the French government's optical telegraph network. In 1840 he began using pigeons for communications to Paris, London, and Brussels. Havas began to use the electric telegraph when it became available.[113]

One of Havas's proteges, Bernhard Wolff, founded Wolffs Telegraphisches Bureau in Berlin in 1849.[114] Another Havas disciple, Paul Reuter, began collecting news from Germany and France in 1849, and in 1851 immigrated to London, where he established the Reuters news agency—specializing in news from the continent.[115] In 1863, William Saunders and Edward Spender formed the Central Press agency, later called the Press Association, to handle domestic news.[116] Just before insulated telegraph line crossed the English Channel in 1851, Reuter won the right to transmit stock exchange prices between Paris and London.[117] He maneuvered Reuters into a dominant global position with the motto "Follow the Cable", setting up news outposts across the British Empire in Alexandria (1865), Bombay (1866), Melbourne (1874), Sydney (1874), and Cape Town (1876).[117][118] In the United States, the Associated Press became a news powerhouse, gaining a lead position through an exclusive arrangement with the Western Union company.[119]

The telegraph ushered in a new global communications regime, accompanied by a restructuring of the national postal systems, and closely followed by the advent of telephone lines. With the value of international news at a premium, governments, businesses, and news agencies moved aggressively to reduce transmission times. In 1865, Reuters had the scoop on the Lincoln assassination, reporting the news in England twelve days after the event took place.[120] In 1866, an undersea telegraph cable successfully connected Ireland to Newfoundland (and thus the Western Union network) cutting trans-Atlantic transmission time from days to hours.[121][122][123] The transatlantic cable allowed fast exchange of information about the London and New York stock exchanges, as well as the New York, Chicago, and Liverpool commodity exchanges—for the price of $5–10, in gold, per word.[124] Transmitting On 11 May 1857, a young British telegraph operator in Delhi signaled home to alert the authorities of the Indian Rebellion of 1857. The rebels proceeded to disrupt the British telegraph network, which was rebuilt with more redundancies.[125] In 1902–1903, Britain and the U.S. completed the circumtelegraphy of the planet with transpacific cables from Canada to Fiji and New Zealand (British Empire), and from the US to Hawaii and the occupied Philippines.[126] U.S. reassertions of the Monroe Doctrine notwithstanding, Latin America was a battleground of competing telegraphic interests until World War I, after which U.S. interests finally did consolidate their power in the hemisphere.[127]

 
World railway and telegraph system, 1900

By the turn of the century (i.e., circa 1900), Wolff, Havas, and Reuters formed a news cartel, dividing up the global market into three sections, in which each had more-or-less exclusive distribution rights and relationships with national agencies.[128] Each agency's area corresponded roughly to the colonial sphere of its mother country.[129] Reuters and the Australian national news service had an agreement to exchange news only with each other.[130] Due to the high cost of maintaining infrastructure, political goodwill, and global reach, newcomers found it virtually impossible to challenge the big three European agencies or the American Associated Press.[131] In 1890 Reuters (in partnership with the Press Association, England's major news agency for domestic stories) expanded into "soft" news stories for public consumption, about topics such as sports and "human interest".[132] In 1904, the big three wire services opened relations with Vestnik, the news agency of Czarist Russia, to their group, though they maintained their own reporters in Moscow.[133] During and after the Russian Revolution, the outside agencies maintained a working relationship with the Petrograd Telegraph Agency, renamed the Russian Telegraph Agency (ROSTA) and eventually the Telegraph Agency of the Soviet Union (TASS).[134]

The Chinese Communist Party created its news agency, the Red China News Agency, in 1931; its primary responsibilities were the Red China newspaper and the internal Reference News. In 1937, the Party renamed the agency Xinhua, New China. Xinhua became the official news agency of the People's Republic of China in 1949.[135]

These agencies touted their ability to distill events into "minute globules of news", 20–30 word summaries which conveyed the essence of new developments.[134] Unlike newspapers, and contrary to the sentiments of some of their reporters, the agencies sought to keep their reports simple and factual.[136] The wire services brought forth the "inverted pyramid" model of news copy, in which key facts appear at the start of the text, and more and more details are included as it goes along.[121] The sparse telegraphic writing style spilled over into newspapers, which often reprinted stories from the wire with little embellishment.[18][137] In a 20 September 1918 Pravda editorial, Lenin instructed the Soviet press to cut back on their political rambling and produce many short anticapitalist news items in "telegraph style".[138]

As in previous eras, the news agencies provided special services to political and business clients, and these services constituted a significant portion of their operations and income. The wire services maintained close relationships with their respective national governments, which provided both press releases and payments.[139] The acceleration and centralization of economic news facilitated regional economic integration and economic globalization. "It was the decrease in information costs and the increasing communication speed that stood at the roots of increased market integration, rather than falling transport costs by itself. In order to send goods to another area, merchants needed to know first whether in fact to send off the goods and to what place. Information costs and speed were essential for these decisions."[140]

Radio and television

The British Broadcasting Company began transmitting radio news from London in 1922, dependent entirely, by law, on the British news agencies.[141] BBC radio marketed itself as a news by and for social elites, and hired only broadcasters who spoke with upper-class accents.[142] The BBC gained importance in the May 1926 general strike, during which newspapers were closed and the radio served as the only source of news for an uncertain public. (To the displeasure of many listeners, the BBC took an unambiguously pro-government stance against the strikers).[141][143]

In the US, RCA's Radio Group established its radio network, NBC, in 1926. The Paley family founded CBS soon after. These two networks, which supplied news broadcasts to subsidiaries and affiliates, dominated the airwaves throughout the period of radio's hegemony as a news source.[144] Radio broadcasters in the United States negotiated a similar arrangement with the press in 1933, when they agreed to use only news from the Press–Radio Bureau and eschew advertising; this agreement soon collapsed and radio stations began reporting their own news (with advertising).[145] As in Britain, American news radio avoided "controversial" topics as per norms established by the National Association of Broadcasters.[146] By 1939, 58% of Americans surveyed by Fortune considered radio news more accurate than newspapers, and 70% chose radio as their main news source.[146] Radio expanded rapidly across the continent, from 30 stations in 1920 to a thousand in the 1930s. This operation was financed mostly with advertising and public relations money.[147]

The Soviet Union began a major international broadcasting operation in 1929, with stations in German, English and French. The Nazi Party made use of the radio in its rise to power in Germany, with much of its propaganda focused on attacking the Soviet Bolsheviks. The British and Italian foreign radio services competed for influence in North Africa. All four of these broadcast services grew increasingly vitriolic as the European nations prepared for war.[148]

The war provided an opportunity to expand radio and take advantage of its new potential. The BBC reported on Allied invasion of Normandy on 8:00 a.m. of the morning it took place, and including a clip from German radio coverage of the same event. Listeners followed along with developments throughout the day.[149] The U.S. set up its Office of War Information which by 1942 sent programming across South America, the Middle East, and East Asia.[150] Radio Luxembourg, a centrally located high-power station on the continent, was seized by Germany, and then by the United States—which created fake news programs appearing as though they were created by Germany.[151] Targeting American troops in the Pacific, the Japanese government broadcast the "Zero Hour" program, which included news from the U.S. to make the soldiers homesick.[152] But by the end of the war, Britain had the largest radio network in the world, broadcasting internationally in 43 different languages.[153] Its scope would eventually be surpassed (by 1955) by the worldwide Voice of America programs, produced by the United States Information Agency.[154]

In Britain and the United States, television news watching rose dramatically in the 1950s and by the 1960s supplanted radio as the public's primary source of news.[155] In the U.S., television was run by the same networks which owned radio: CBS, NBC, and an NBC spin-off called ABC.[156] Edward R. Murrow, who first entered the public ear as a war reporter in London, made the big leap to television to become an iconic newsman on CBS (and later the director of the United States Information Agency).[157]

Ted Turner's creation of the Cable News Network (CNN) in 1980 inaugurated a new era of 24-hour satellite news broadcasting. In 1991, the BBC introduced a competitor, BBC World Service Television. Rupert Murdoch's Australian News Corporation entered the picture with Fox News Channel in the US, Sky News in Britain, and STAR TV in Asia.[158] Combining this new apparatus with the use of embedded reporters, the United States waged the 1991–1992 Gulf War with the assistance of nonstop media coverage.[159] CNN's specialty is the crisis, to which the network is prepared to shift its total attention if so chosen.[160] CNN news was transmitted via INTELSAT communications satellites.[161] CNN, said an executive, would bring a "town crier to the global village".[162]

In 1996, the Qatar-owned broadcaster Al Jazeera emerged as a powerful alternative to the Western media, capitalizing in part on anger in the Arab & Muslim world regarding biased coverage of the Gulf War. Al Jazeera hired many news workers conveniently laid off by BBC Arabic Television, which closed in April 1996. It used Arabsat to broadcast.[158]

Internet

The early internet, known as ARPANET, was controlled by the U.S. Department of Defense and used mostly by academics. It became available to a wider public with the release of the Netscape browser in 1994.[163] At first, news websites were mostly archives of print publications.[164] An early online newspaper was the Electronic Telegraph, published by The Daily Telegraph.[165][166] A 1994 earthquake in California was one of the first big stories to be reported online in real time.[167] The new availability of web browsing made news sites accessible to more people.[167] On the day of the Oklahoma City bombing in April 1995, people flocked to newsgroups and chatrooms to discuss the situation and share information. The Oklahoma City Daily posted news to its site within hours. Two of the only news sites capable of hosting images, the San Jose Mercury News and Time magazine, posted photographs of the scene.[167]

Quantitatively, the internet has massively expanded the sheer volume of news items available to one person. The speed of news flow to individuals has also reached a new plateau.[168] This insurmountable flow of news can daunt people and cause information overload. Zbigniew Brzezinski called this period the "technetronic era", in which "global reality increasingly absorbs the individual, involves him, and even occasionally overwhelms him."[169]

In cases of government crackdowns or revolutions, the Internet has often become a major communication channel for news propagation; while it's a (relatively) simple act to shut down a newspaper, radio or television station, mobile devices such as smartphones and netbooks are much harder to detect and confiscate. The propagation of internet-capable mobile devices has also given rise to the citizen journalist, who provide an additional perspective on unfolding events.

News media today

News can travel through different communication media.[17] In modern times, printed news had to be phoned into a newsroom or brought there by a reporter, where it was typed and either transmitted over wire services or edited and manually set in type along with other news stories for a specific edition. Today, the term "breaking news" has become trite as commercial broadcasting United States cable news services that are available 24 hours a day use live communications satellite technology to bring current events into consumers' homes as the event occurs. Events that used to take hours or days to become common knowledge in towns or in nations are fed instantaneously to consumers via radio, television, mobile phone, and the internet.

Speed of news transmission, of course, still varies wildly on the basis of where and how one lives.[170]

Newspaper

 
A newspaper is one of the most common ways to receive the latest news.

Most large cities in the United States historically had morning and afternoon newspapers. With the addition of new communications media, afternoon newspapers have shut down and morning newspapers have lost circulation. Weekly newspapers have somewhat increased.[171] In more and more cities, newspapers have established local market monopolies—i.e., a single newspaper is the only one in town. This process has accelerated since the 1980s, commensurate with a general trend of consolidation in media ownership.[172] In China, too, newspapers have gained exclusive status, city-by-city, and pooled into large associations such as Chengdu Business News. These associations function like news agencies, challenging the hegemony of Xinhua as a news provider.[135]

The world's top three most circulated newspapers all publish from Japan.

About one-third of newspaper revenue comes from sales; the majority comes from advertising.[173] Newspapers have struggled to maintain revenue given declining circulation and the free flow of information over the internet; some have implemented paywalls for their websites.[165]

In the U.S., many newspapers have shifted their operations online, publishing around the clock rather than daily in order to keep pace with the internet society. Prognosticators have suggested that print newspapers will vanish from the U.S. in 5–20 years.[165] Many newspapers have started to track social media engagement for trending news stories to cover.

Television

Internationally distributed news channels include BBC News, CNN, Fox News, MSNBC, CBC News Network, and Sky News. Televisions are densely concentrated in the United States (98% of households), and the average American watches 4 hours of television programming each day. In other parts of the world, such as Kenya—especially rural areas without much electricity—televisions are rare.[170]

The largest supplier of international video news is Reuters TV, with 409 subscribers in 83 countries, 38 bureaus, and a reported audience of 1.5 billion people each day. The other major video news service is Associated Press Television News. These two major agencies have agreements to exchange video news with ABC, NBC, CBS, CNN, and Eurovision—itself a sizeable video news exchange.[174] CNN International is a notable broadcaster in times of crisis.[160]

Internet

Online journalism is news that is reported on the internet. News can be delivered more quickly through this method of news as well as accessed more easily. The internet era has transformed the understanding of news. Because the internet allows communication which is not only instantaneous, but also bi- or multi-directional, it has blurred the boundaries of who is a legitimate news producer. A common type of internet journalism is called blogging, which is a service of persistently written articles uploaded and written by one or more individuals. Millions of people in countries such as the United States and South Korea have taken up blogging. Many blogs have rather small audiences; some blogs are read by millions each month.[175] Social media sites, especially Twitter and Facebook, have become an important source of breaking news information and for disseminating links to news websites. Twitter declared in 2012: "It's like being delivered a newspaper whose headlines you'll always find interesting—you can discover news as it's happening, learn more about topics that are important to you, and get the inside scoop in real time."[176] Cell phone cameras have normalized citizen photojournalism.[177]

Michael Schudson, professor at the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism, has said that "[e]verything we thought we once knew about journalism needs to be rethought in the Digital Age."[178] Today the work of journalism can be done from anywhere and done well. It requires no more than a reporter and a laptop. In that way, journalistic authority seems to have become more individual- and less institution-based. But does the individual reporter always have to be an actual journalist? Or can journalistic work be done from anywhere and by anyone? These are questions that refer to the core of journalistic practice and the definition of "news" itself. As Schudson has given emphasis to, the answer is not easily found; "the ground journalists walk upon is shaking, and the experience for both those who work in the field and those on the outside studying it is dizzying".[178]

Schudson has identified the following six specific areas where the ecology of news in his opinion has changed:

  • The line between the reader and writer has blurred.
  • The distinction among tweet, blog post, Facebook, newspaper story, magazine article, and book has blurred.
  • The line between professionals and amateurs has blurred, and a variety of "pro-am" relationships has emerged.
  • The boundaries delineating for-profit, public, and non-profit media have blurred, and the cooperation across these models of financing has developed.
  • Within commercial news organizations, the line between the news room and the business office has blurred.
  • The line between old media and new media has blurred, practically beyond recognition.[179]

These alterations inevitably have fundamental ramifications for the contemporary ecology of news. "The boundaries of journalism, which just a few years ago seemed relatively clear, and permanent, have become less distinct, and this blurring, while potentially the foundation of progress even as it is the source of risk, has given rise to a new set of journalistic principles and practices",[180] Schudson puts it. It is indeed complex, but it seems to be the future.

Online news has also changed the geographic reach of individual news stories, diffusing readership from city-by-city markets to a potentially global audience.[165]

The growth of social media networks have also created new opportunities for automated and efficient news gathering for journalists and newsrooms. Many newsrooms (broadcasters, newspapers, magazines, radio and TV) have started to perform news gathering on social media platforms. Social media is creating changes in the consumer behaviour and news consumption. According to a study by Pew Research, a large portion of Americans read news on digital and on mobile devices.

Because internet does not have the "column inches" limitation of print media, online news stories can, but don't always, come bundled with supplementary material. The medium of the World Wide Web also enables hyperlinking, which allows readers to navigate to other pages related to the one they're reading.[165]

Despite these changes, some studies have concluded that internet news coverage remains fairly homogenous and dominated by news agencies.[181][182] And journalists working with online media do not identify significantly different criteria for newsworthiness than print journalists.[23]

News agencies

 
Reuters office in Bonn, Germany, 1988

News agencies are services which compile news and disseminate it in bulk. Because they disseminate information to a wide variety of clients, who repackage the material as news for public consumption, news agencies tend to use less controversial language in their reports. Despite their importance, news agencies are not well known by the general public. They keep low profiles and their reporters usually do not get bylines.[18][183]

The oldest news agency still operating is the Agence France-Presse (AFP).[184] It was founded in 1835 by a Parisian translator and advertising agent, Charles-Louis Havas as Agence Havas. By the end of the twentieth century, Reuters far outpaced the other news agencies in profits, and became one of the largest companies in Europe.[185] In 2011, Thomson Reuters employed more than 55,000 people in 100 countries, and posted an annual revenue of $12.9 billion.[18]

United Press International gained prominence as a world news agency in the middle of the twentieth century, but shrank in the 1980s and was sold off at low prices. It is owned by the Unification Church company News World Communications.

News agencies, especially Reuters and the newly important Bloomberg News, convey both news stories for mass audiences and financial information of interest to businesses and investors.[186][187] Bloomberg LP, a private company founded by Michael Bloomberg in 1981, made rapid advances with computerized stock market reporting updated in real time. Its news service continued to exploit this electronic advantage by combining computer-generated analytics with text reporting. Bloomberg linked with Agence France Presse in the 1990s.[187]

Following the marketization of the Chinese economy and the media boom of the 1990s, Xinhua has adopted some commercial practices including subscription fees, but it remains government-subsidized. It provides newswire, news photos, economic information, and audio and video news. Xinhua has a growing number of subscribers, totaling 16,969 in 2002, including 93% of Chinese newspapers.[135] It operates 123 foreign bureaus and produces 300 news stories each day.[188]

Other agencies with considerable reach include Deutsche Presse-Agentur (Germany), Kyodo News (Japan), the Agenzia Nazionale Stampa Associata (Italy), the Middle East News Agency (Egypt), Tanjug (Serbia), EFE (Spain), and Anadolu Agency (Turkey).[189]

On the internet, news aggregators play a role similar to that of the news agency—and, because of the sources they select, tend to transmit news stories which originate from the main agencies. Of articles displayed by Yahoo! News in the U.S., 91.7% come from news agencies: 39.4% from AP, 30.9% AFP, and 21.3% Reuters. In India, 60.1% of Yahoo! News stories come from Reuters. Google News relies somewhat less on news agencies, and has shown high volatility, in the sense of focusing heavily on the most recent handful of salient world events.[181] In 2010, Google News redesigned its front page with automatic geotargeting, which generated a selection of local news items for every viewer.[190]

Global news system

In the 20th century, global news coverage was dominated by a combination of the "Big Four" news agencies—Reuters, Associated Press, Agence France Press, and United Press International—representing the Western bloc, and the Communist agencies: TASS from the Soviet Union, and Xinhua from China.[191] Studies of major world events, and analyses of all international news coverage in various newspapers, consistently found that a large majority of news items originated from the four biggest wire services.[181]

Television news agencies include Associated Press Television News, which bought and incorporated World Television News; and Reuters Television.[174][192] Bloomberg News created in the 1990s, expanded rapidly to become a player in the realm of international news.[186] The Associated Press also maintains a radio network with thousands of subscribers worldwide; it is the sole provider of international news to many small stations.[174]

By some accounts, dating back to the 1940s, the increasing interconnectedness of the news system has accelerated the pace of human history itself.[193]

New World Information and Communication Order

The global news system is dominated by agencies from Europe and the United States, and reflects their interests and priorities in its coverage.[194] Euro-American control of the global news system has led to criticism; that events around the world are constantly compared to events like the Holocaust and World War II, which are considered foundational in the West.[195] Since the 1960s, a significant amount of news reporting from the Third World has been characterized by some form "development journalism", a paradigm which focuses on long-term development projects, social change, and nation-building.[196] When in 1987 the U.S. media reported on a riot in the Dominican Republic—the first major news item regarding that country in years—the resulting decline in tourism lasted for years and had a noticeable effect on the economy.[197] The English language predominates in global news exchanges.[198] Critics have accused the global news system of perpetuating cultural imperialism.[162][199][200] Critics further charge that the Western media conglomerates maintain a bias towards the status quo economic order, especially a pro-corporate bias.[199]

The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) has promoted a New World Information and Communication Order, which envisions an international news exchange system involving national news agencies in every country. UNESCO encouraged the new states formed from colonial territories in the 1960s to establish news agencies, to generate domestic news stories, exchange news items with international partners, and disseminate both types of news internally.[201] Along these lines, the 1980 MacBride report, "Many Voices, One World", called for an interdependent global news system with more participation from different governments. To this end, also, UNESCO formed the Non-Aligned News Agencies Pool.[202]

The Inter Press Service, founded in 1964, has served as an intermediary for Third World press agencies.[203] Inter Press Service's editorial policy favors coverage of events, institutions, and issues which relate to inequality, economic development, economic integration, natural resources, population, health, education, and sustainable development.[204] It gives less coverage than other agencies to crime, disasters, and violence. Geographically, 70% of its news reporting concerns Africa, Asia, Latin America, and the Caribbean.[205] IPS has the most subscribers in Latin America and southern Africa.[204] IPS receives grants from organizations such as the United Nations Development Program and other United Nations agencies and private foundations to report news on chosen topics, including the environment, sustainable development, and women's issues.[206]

Beginning in the 1960s, the United States Agency for International Development, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, and UNESCO developed the use of satellite television for international broadcasting. In India, 1975–1976, these agencies implemented an experimental satellite television system, called the Satellite Instructional Television Experiment, with assistance from the Indian Space Research Organisation, and All India Radio.[207]

Further transformation in global news flow

By the 1980s, much of the Third World had succumbed to a debt crisis resulting from unpayable large loans accumulated since the 1960s. At this point, the World Bank took an active role in the governance of many countries, and its authority extended to communications policy. The policy of developing Third World media gave way to a global regime of free trade institutions like the World Trade Organization, which also protected the free flow of information across borders.[208] The World Bank also promoted privatization of national telecommunications, which afforded large multinational corporations the opportunity to purchase networks and expand operations in the Third World.[209][210]

In countries with less telecommunications infrastructure, people, especially youth, tend today to get their news predominantly from mobile phones and, less so, from the internet. Older folks listen more to the radio. The government of China is a major investor in Third World telecommunications, especially in Africa.[211] Some issues relating to global information flow were revisited in light of the internet at the 2003/2005 World Summit on the Information Society, a conference which emphasized the role of civil society and the private sector in information society governance.[212]

News values

News values are the professional norms of journalism. Commonly, news content should contain all the "Five Ws" (who, what, when, where, why, and also how) of an event. Newspapers normally place hard news stories on the first pages, so the most important information is at the beginning, enabling busy readers to read as little or as much as they desire. Local stations and networks with a set format must take news stories and break them down into the most important aspects due to time constraints.

Journalists are often expected to aim for objectivity; reporters claim to try to cover all sides of an issue without bias, as compared to commentators or analysts, who provide opinion or personal points of view. The resulting articles lay out facts in a sterile, noncommittal manner, standing back to "let the reader decide" the truth of the matter.[213] Several governments impose certain constraints against bias. In the United Kingdom, the government agency of Ofcom (Office of Communications) enforces a legal requirement of "impartiality" on news broadcasters.[214] Both newspapers and broadcast news programs in the United States are generally expected to remain neutral and avoid bias except for clearly indicated editorial articles or segments. Many single-party governments have operated state-run news organizations, which may present the government's views.

Although newswriters have always laid claim to truth and objectivity, the modern values of professional journalism were established beginning in the late 1800s and especially after World War I, when groups like the American Society of Newspaper Editors codified rules for unbiased news reporting. These norms held the most sway in American and British journalism, and were scorned by some other countries.[215][216] These ideas have become part of the practice of journalism across the world.[217] Soviet commentators said stories in the Western press were trivial distractions from reality, and emphasized a socialist realism model focusing on developments in everyday life.[218]

Even in those situations where objectivity is expected, it is difficult to achieve, and individual journalists may fall foul of their own personal bias, or succumb to commercial or political pressure. Similarly, the objectivity of news organizations owned by conglomerated corporations fairly may be questioned, in light of the natural incentive for such groups to report news in a manner intended to advance the conglomerate's financial interests. Individuals and organizations who are the subject of news reports may use news management techniques to try to make a favourable impression.[219] Because each individual has a particular point of view, it is recognized that there can be no absolute objectivity in news reporting.[220] Journalists can collectively shift their opinion over what is a controversy up for debate and what is an established fact, as evidenced by homogenization during the 2000s of news coverage of climate change.[221]

Some commentators on news values have argued that journalists' training in news values itself represents a systemic bias of the news. The norm of objectivity leads journalists to gravitate towards certain types of acts and exclude others. A journalist can be sure of objectivity in reporting that an official or public figure has made a certain statement. This is one reason why so much news reporting is devoted to official statements.[222] This lemma dates back to the early history of public news reporting, as exemplified by an English printer who on 12 March 1624 published news from Brussels in the form of letters, with the prefacing comment: "Now because you shall not say, that either out of my owne conceit I misliked a phrase, or presumptuously tooke upon me to reforme any thing amisse, I will truly set you downe their owne words."[223]

Feminist critiques argue that discourse defined as objective by news organizations reflects a male-centered perspective.[224] In their selection of sources, journalists rely heavily on men as sources of authoritative- and objective-seeming statements.[225] News reporting has also tended to discuss women differently, usually in terms of appearance and relationship to men.[226]

The critique of traditional norms of objectivity comes from within news organizations as well. Said Peter Horrocks, head of television news at BBC: "The days of middle-of-the-road, balancing Left and Right, impartiality are dead. […] we need to consider adopting what I like to think of as a much wider 'radical impartiality'—the need to hear the widest range of views—all sides of the story."[214]

Social organization of news production

News organizations

Viewed from a sociological perspective, news for mass consumption is produced in hierarchical organizations. Reporters, working near the bottom of the structure, are given significant autonomy in researching and preparing reports, subject to assignments and occasional intervention from higher decision-makers.[227] Owners at the top of the news hierarchy influence the content of news indirectly but substantially. The professional norms of journalism discourage overt censorship; however, news organizations have covert but firm norms about how to cover certain topics. These policies are conveyed to journalists through socialization on the job; without any written policy, they simply learn how things are done.[228][229] Journalists comply with these rules for various reasons, including job security.[230] Journalists are also systematically influenced by their education, including journalism school.[231]

News production is routinized in several ways. News stories use familiar formats and subgenres which vary by topic. "Rituals of objectivity", such as pairing a quotation from one group with a quotation from a competing group, dictate the construction of most news narratives. Many news items revolve around periodic press conferences or other scheduled events. Further routine is established by assigning each journalist to a beat: a domain of human affairs, usually involving government or commerce, in which certain types of events routinely occur.[232]

A common scholarly frame for understanding news production is to examine the role of information gatekeepers: to ask why and how certain narratives make their way from news producers to news consumers.[233] Obvious gatekeepers include journalists, news agency staff, and wire editors of newspapers.[234] Ideology, personal preferences, source of news, and length of a story are among the many considerations which influence gatekeepers.[235] Although social media have changed the structure of news dissemination, gatekeeper effects may continue due to the role of a few central nodes in the social network.[236]

New factors have emerged in internet-era newsrooms. One issue is "click-thinking", the editorial selection of news stories—and of journalists—who can generate the most website hits and thus advertising revenue. Unlike a newspaper, a news website has detailed data collection about which stories are popular and who is reading them.[183][237] The drive for speedy online postings, some journalists have acknowledged, has altered norms of fact-checking so that verification takes place after publication.[183][238]

Journalists' sometimes unattributed echoing of other news sources can also increase the homogeneity of news feeds.[239] The digital age can accelerate the problem of circular reporting: propagation of the same error through increasingly reliable sources. In 2009, a number of journalists were embarrassed after all reproducing a fictional quotation, originating from Wikipedia.[239][240]

News organizations have historically been male-dominated, though women have acted as journalists since at least the 1880s. The number of female journalists has increased over time, but organizational hierarchies remain controlled mostly by men.[241] Studies of British news organizations estimate that more than 80% of decision-makers are men.[242] Similar studies have found 'old boys' networks' in control of news organizations in the United States and the Netherlands.[243] Further, newsrooms tend to divide journalists by gender, assigning men to "hard" topics like military, crime, and economics, and women to "soft", "humanised" topics.[244]

Relationship with institutions

For various reasons, news media usually have a close relationship with the state, and often church as well, even when they cast themselves in critical roles.[48][49][245] This relationship seems to emerge because the press can develop symbiotic relationships with other powerful social institutions.[245] In the United States, the Associated Press wire service developed a "bilateral monopoly" with the Western Union telegraph company.[119][246]

The news agencies which rose to power in the mid-1800s all had support from their respective governments, and in turn served their political interests to some degree.[139] News for consumption has operated under statist assumptions, even when it takes a stance adversarial to some aspect of a government.[247] In practice, a large proportion of routine news production involves interactions between reporters and government officials.[248] Relatedly, journalists tend to adopt a hierarchical view of society, according to which a few people at the top of organizational pyramids are best situated to comment on the reality which serves as the basisi of news.[249] Broadly speaking, therefore, news tends to normalize and reflect the interests of the power structure dominant in its social context.[250]

Today, international non-governmental organizations (NGOs) rival and may surpass governments in their influence on the content of news.[251]

State control

Governments use international news transmissions to promote the national interest and conduct political warfare, alternatively known as public diplomacy and, in the modern era, international broadcasting. International radio broadcasting came into wide-ranging use by world powers seeking cultural integration of their empires.[252] The British government used BBC radio as a diplomatic tool, setting up Arabic, Spanish and Portuguese services in 1937.[253] American propaganda broadcasters include Voice of America and Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, set up during the Cold War and still operating today.[254] The United States remains the world's top broadcaster, although by some accounts it was surpassed for a time circa 1980 by the Soviet Union. Other major international broadcasters include the People's Republic of China, Taiwan, Germany, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, North Korea, India, Cuba, and Australia.[255] Around the world (and especially, formerly, in the Soviet bloc), international news sources such as the BBC World Service are often welcomed as alternatives to domestic state-run media.[256][257]

Governments have also funneled programming through private news organizations, as when the British government arranged to insert news into the Reuters feed during and after World War Two.[258] Past revelations have suggested that the U.S. military and intelligence agencies create news stories which they disseminate secretly into the foreign and domestic media. Investigation into the Central Intelligence Agency pursued in the 1970s found that it owned hundreds of news organizations (wire services, newspapers, magazines) outright.[259][260] Soviet news warfare also involved the creation of front groups, like the International Organization of Journalists. The Russian KGB heavily pursued a strategy of disinformation, planting false stories which made their way to news outlets worldwide.[261]

Broadcasts into Iraq before the Second Gulf War mimicked the style of local programming.[262] The US also launched Middle East Broadcasting Networks, featuring the satellite TV station Alhurra and radio station Radio Sawa to beam 24-hour programming to Iraq and environs.[263]

Today, Al Jazeera, a TV and internet news network owned by the government of Qatar, has become one of the foremost news sources in the world, appreciated by millions as an alternative to the Western media.[264] State-owned China Central Television operates 18 channels and reaches more than a billion viewers worldwide.[265] Iran's Press TV and Russia's Russia Today, branded as RT, also have multiplatform presences and large audiences.

Public relations

If important things of life to-day consist of trans-atlantic radiophone talks arranged by commercial telephone companies; if they consist of inventions that will be commercially advantageous to the men who market them; if they consist of Henry Fords with epoch-making cars—then all this is news.

Edward Bernays, Propaganda (1928), pp. 152–153.

As distinct from advertising, which deals with marketing distinct from news, public relations involves the techniques of influencing news in order to give a certain impression to the public. A standard public relations tactic, the "third-party technique", is the creation of seemingly independent organizations, which can deliver objective-sounding statements to news organizations without revealing their corporate connections.[266] Public relations agencies can create complete content packages, such as Video News Releases, which are rebroadcast as news without commentary or detail about their origin.[267] Video news releases seem like normal news programming, but use subtle product placement and other techniques to influence viewers.[268]

Public relations releases offer valuable newsworthy information to increasingly overworked journalists on deadline.[239] (This pre-organized news content has been called an information subsidy.)[269] The journalist relies on appearances of autonomy and even opposition to established interests—but the public relations agent seek to conceal their client's influence on the news,. Thus, public relations works its magic in secret.[251][270]

Public relations can dovetail with state objectives, as in the case of the 1990 news story about Iraqi soldiers taking "babies out of incubators" in Kuwaiti hospitals.[271] During the Nigerian Civil War, both the federal government and the secessionist Republic of Biafra hired public relations firms, which competed to influence public opinion in the West, and between them established some of the key narratives employed in news reports about the war.[272]

Overall, the position of the public relations industry has grown stronger, while the position of news producers has grown weaker. Public relations agents mediate the production of news about all sectors of society.[270]

News consumption

Over the centuries, commentators on newspapers and society have repeatedly observed widespread human interest in news.[4][273] Elite members of a society's political and economic institutions might rely on news as one limited source of information, for the masses, news represents a relatively exclusive window onto the operations by which a society is managed.[274]

Regular people in societies with news media often spend a lot of time reading or watching news reports.[275] Newspapers became significant aspects of national and literary culture—as exemplified by James Joyce's Ulysses, which derives from the newspapers of 16 June (and thereabouts), 1904, and represents the newspaper office itself as a vital part of life in Dublin.[276]

A 1945 study by sociologist Bernard Berelson found that during the 1945 New York newspaper strike, New Yorkers exhibited a virtual addiction to news, describing themselves as "lost", "nervous", "isolated", and "suffering" due to the withdrawal.[277] Television news has become still further embedded in everyday life, with specific programming anticipated at different times of day.[278] Children tend to find the news boring, too serious, or emotionally disturbing. They come to perceive news as characteristic of adulthood, and begin watching television news in their teenage years because of the adult status it confers.[279]

People exhibit various forms of skepticism towards the news. Studies of tabloid readers found that many of them gain pleasure from seeing through the obviously fake or poorly constructed stories—and get their "real news" from television.[280]

Social and cultural cohesion

An important feature distinguishing news from private information transfers is the impression that when one reads (or hears, or watches) it, one joins a larger public.[281] In this regard news serves to unify its receivers under the banner of a culture, or a society, as well as into the sub-demographics of a society targeted by their favorite kind of news.[282] News thus plays a role in nation-building, the construction of a national identity.[283]

Images connected with news can also become iconic and gain a fixed role in the culture. Examples such as Alfred Eisenstaedt's photograph V-J Day in Times Square, Nick Ut's photograph of Phan Thi Kim Phuc and other children running from a napalm blast in Vietnam; Kevin Carter's photograph of a starving child being stalked by a vulture;[195] etc.

With the new interconnectedness of global media, the experience of receiving news along with a world audience reinforces the social cohesion effect on a larger scale.[284] As a corollary, global media culture may erode the uniqueness and cohesion of national cultures.[199]

Public sphere

This collective form experience can be understood to constitute a political realm or public sphere.[281][285] In this view, the news media constitute a fourth estate which serves to check and balance the operations of government.[278]

This idea, at least as a goal to be sought, has re-emerged in the era of global communications.[286] Today, unprecedented opportunities exist for public analysis and discussion of world events.[287] According to one interpretation of the CNN effect, instantaneous global news coverage can rally public opinion as never before to motivate political action.[288] In 1989, local and global communications media-enabled instant exposure to and discussion of the Chinese government's actions in Tiananmen Square. The news about Tiananmen Square travelled over a fax machine, telephone, newspaper, radio, and television, and continued to travel even after the government imposed new restrictions on local telecommunications.[289]

News events

As the technological means for disseminating news grew more powerful, news became an experience which millions of people could undergo simultaneously. Outstanding news experiences can exert a profound influence on millions of people. Through its power to effect a shared experience, news events can mold the collective memory of a society.[290][291]

One type of news event, the media event, is a scripted pageant organized for a mass live broadcast. Media events include athletic contests such as the Super Bowl and the Olympics, cultural events like awards ceremonies and celebrity funerals, and also political events such as coronations, debates between electoral candidates, and diplomatic ceremonies.[292] These events typically unfold according to a common format which simplifies the transmission of news items about them.[293] Usually, they have the effect of increasing the perceived unity of all parties involved, which include the broadcasters and audience.[294] Today, international events such as a national declaration of independence can be scripted in advance with the major news agencies, with staff specially deployed to key locations worldwide in advance of the life news broadcast. Public relations companies can participate in these events as well.[295]

The perception that an ongoing crisis is taking place further increases the significance of live news. People rely on the news and constantly seek more of it, to learn new information and to seek reassurance amidst feelings of fear and uncertainty.[296] Crises can also increase the effect of the news on social cohesion, and lead the population of a country to "rally" behind its current leadership.[297] The rise of a global news system goes hand in hand with the advent of terrorism and other sensational acts, which have power in proportion to the audience they capture. In 1979, the capture of American hostages in Iran dominated months of news coverage in the western media, gained the status of a "crisis", and influenced a presidential election.[298]

South Africans overwhelmingly describe the end of Apartheid as a source of the country's most important news.[299] In the United States, news events such as the assassinations of the 1960s (of John F. Kennedy, Martin Luther King, Jr., and Robert F. Kennedy), the 1969 moon landing, the 1986 Challenger explosion, the 1997 death of Princess Diana, the intervention of the Supreme Court in the 2000 presidential election and the 2001 September 11 attacks.[300] In Jordan, people cited numerous memorable news events involving death and war, including the death of King Hussein, Princess Diana, and Yitzhak Rabin. Positive news stories found memorable by Jordanians featured political events affecting their lives and families—such as the Israeli withdrawal from South Lebanon, and the Israel–Jordan peace treaty.[301]

News coverage can also shape collective memory in retrospect. A study of Israeli news coverage leading up to the media event of the nation's 60th birthday found that news coverage of events like the Holocaust, World War Two, and subsequent Israeli wars increased the perceived importance of these events in the minds of citizens.[302]

News making

News making is the act of making the news or doing something that is considered to be newsworthy. When discussing the act of news making, scholars refer to specific models. Five of these models are the Professional Model, Mirror Model, Organizational Model, Political Model, and Civic Journalism Model.[303]

The Professional Model is when skilled peoples put certain events together for a specific audience. The reaction of the audience is influential because it can determine the impact that the particular article or newspaper has on the readers.[304] The Mirror Model states that news should reflect reality. This model aims to focus on particular events and provide accuracy in reporting. The Organizational Model is also known as the Bargaining Model.[303] It focuses on influencing various news organizations by applying pressures to governmental processes. The Political Model outlines that news represents the ideological biases of the people as well as the various pressures of the political environment. This model mainly influences journalists and attempts to promote public opinion.[304] The Civic Journalism Model is when the press discovers the concerns of the people and uses that to write stories. This allows the audience to play an active role in society.

Models of news making help define what the news is and how it influences readers. But it does not necessarily account for the content of print news and online media. Stories are selected if they have a strong impact, incorporate violence and scandal, are familiar and local, and if they are timely.

News Stories with a strong impact can be easily understood by a reader. Violence and scandal create an entertaining and attention-grabbing story.[303] Familiarity makes a story more relatable because the reader knows who is being talked about. Proximity can influence a reader more. A story that is timely will receive more coverage because it is a current event. The process of selecting stories coupled with the models of news making are how the media is effective and impactful in society.

Psychological effects

Exposure to constant news coverage of war can lead to stress and anxiety.[305] Television coverage of the destruction of the World Trade Center in 2001, which repeated the same footage over and over, led to symptoms of trauma experienced across the United States.[306] Studies have indicated that children have been traumatized by exposure to television of other frightening events, including the Challenger disaster.[307] Journalists themselves also experience trauma and guilt.[308]

Research also suggest that constant representations of violence in the news lead people to overestimate the frequency of its occurrence in the real world, thus increasing their level of fear in everyday situations.[309]

Influence

The content and style of news delivery certainly have effects on the general public, with the magnitude and precise nature of these effects being tough to determine experimentally.[310] In Western societies, television viewing has been so ubiquitous that its total effect on psychology and culture leave few alternatives for comparison.[311]

News is the leading source of knowledge about global affairs for people around the world.[312] According to agenda-setting theory, the general public will identify as its priorities those issues which are highlighted on the news.[313] The agenda-setting model has been well-supported by research, which indicate that the public's self-reported concerns respond to changes in news coverage rather than changes in the underlying issue itself.[314] The less an issue obviously affects people's lives, the bigger an influence media agenda-setting can have on their opinion of it.[315] The agenda-setting power becomes even stronger in practice because of the correspondence in news topics promulgated by different media channels.[316]

Influence of sponsorship

It has been acknowledged that sponsorship has historically influenced various news stories.[317][318][319] This history gained widespread attention following the release of the film Anchorman 2.[317][318][319] One example in recent time is the fact that Facebook has invested heavily in news sources and purchasing time on local news media outlets.[320][321] TechCrunch journalist Josh Continue even stated in February 2018 that the company "stole the news business" and used sponsorship to make many news publishers its "ghostwriters."[320] In January 2019, founder Mark Zuckerberg announced that he will spend $300 million in local news buys over a three-year period.[321][322]

See also

References

  1. ^ "News", Oxford English Dictionary, accessed online, 5 March 2015. "Etymology: Spec. use of plural of new n., after Middle French nouvelles (see novel n.), or classical Latin nova new things, in post-classical Latin also news (from late 13th cent. in British sources), use as noun of neuter plural of novus new (compare classical Latin rēs nova (feminine singular) a new development, a fresh turn of events). Compare later novel n."
  2. ^ "Online Etymology Dictionary". Retrieved 7 July 2012.
  3. ^ "Mrs. John Cosgrave Is Dead Founded Finch Junior College: Was Institution's President Nearly 50 Years; Coined 'Current Events' Phrase". New York Herald Tribune. 1 November 1949.
  4. ^ a b Stephens, History of News (1988), p. 13.
  5. ^ a b Smith,The Newspaper: An International History (1979), p. 7. "In the information which [the newspaper] chose to supply, and in the many sources of information which it took over and reorganized, it contained a bias towards recency or newness; to its readers, it offered regularity of publication. It had to be filled with whatever was available, unable to wait until information of greater clarity or certainty or of wider perspective had accumulated."
  6. ^ Salmon, The Newspaper and the Historian (1923), p. 10. Salmon quotes Théophraste Renaudot: "History is the record of things accomplished. A Gazette is the reflection of feelings and rumors of the time which may or may not be true."
  7. ^ a b Pettegree, The Invention of News (2014), p. 3. "Even as news became more plentiful in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, the problem of establishing the veracity of news reports remained acute. The news market—and by the sixteenth century it was a real market—was humming with conflicting reports, some incredible, some all too plausible: lives, fortunes, even the fate of kingdoms could depend upon acting on the right information."
  8. ^ a b Park, "News as a Form of Knowledge" (1940), pp. 675–676. "News is not history because, for one thing among others, it deals, on the whole, with isolated events and does not seek to relate them to one another either in the form of causal or in the form of Teleological sequences."
  9. ^ Schudson, "When? Deadlines, Datelines, and History"; in Reading The News (1986), ed. Manoff & Schudson; pp. 81–82.
  10. ^ Shoemaker & Cohen, News Around the World (2006), pp. 13–14.
  11. ^ Park, "News as a Form of Knowledge" (1940), p. 678.
  12. ^ Stephens, History of News (1988), p. 56. "It is axiomatic in journalism that the fastest medium with the largest potential audience will disseminate the bulk of a community's breaking news. Today that race is being won by television and radio. Consequently, daily newspapers are beginning to underplay breaking news about yesterday's events (already old news to much of their audience) in favor of more analytical perspectives on those events. In other words, dailies are now moving in the direction toward which weeklies retreated when dailies were introduced."
  13. ^ Heyd, Reading newspapers (2012), pp. 35, 82. "... newspapers were defining what news was, categorizing and expanding their domain on the fly. Indeed, Somerville argues that 'news' is not an objective 'historical' concept but one that is defined by the news industry as it creates a commodity sold by publishers to the public."
  14. ^ Stephens, History of News (1988), p. 3. "The term journalism is used broadly here and elsewhere in the book to refer to more than just the production of printed 'journals'; it is the most succinct term we have for the activity of gathering and disseminating news."
  15. ^ Shoemaker & Cohen, News Around the World (2006), p. 7. "[...] for the journalist the assessment of newsworthiness is an operationalization based on the aforementioned conditions. In other words, the practitioner typically constructs a method for fulfilling the daily job requirements. He or she rarely has an underlying theoretical understanding of what defining something or someone as newsworthy entails. To be sure, individual journalists may engage in more abstract musings about their work, but the profession as a whole is content to apply these conditions and does not care that the theory behind the application is not widely understood. Hall (1981, 147) calls news a 'slippery' concept, with journalists defining newsworthiness as those things that get into the news media."
  16. ^ Pettegree, The Invention of News (2014), p. 6. "News fitted ideally into the expanding market for cheap print, and it swiftly became an important commodity."
  17. ^ a b Boyd-Barrett & Rantanen, The Globalization of News (1998), p. 6. "News agency news is considered 'wholesale' resource material, something that has to be worked upon, smelted, reconfigured, for conversion into a news report that is suitable for consumption by ordinary readers. It has also suited the news agencies to be thus presented: they have needed to seem credible to extensive networks of 'retail' clients of many different political and cultural shades and hues. They have wanted to avoid controversy, to maintain an image of plain, almost dull, but completely dependable professionalism."
  18. ^ a b c d Phil MacGregor, "International News Agencies: Global eyes that never blink", in Fowler-Watt & Allan (eds.), Journalism (2013).
  19. ^ Heyd, Reading newspapers (2012), pp. 36–37.
  20. ^ Schudson, Discovering the News (1978), p. 6. "Before the 1920s, journalists did not think much about the subjectivity of perception. They had relatively little incentive to doubt the firmness of the reality by which they lived. […] After World War I, however, this changed. Journalists, like others, lost faith in the democratic market society had taken for granted. Their experience of propaganda during the war and public relations thereafter convinced them that the world they reported was one that interested parties had constructed for them to report. In such a world, naïve empiricism could not last."
  21. ^ Allan, News Culture (2004), pp. 46–47.
  22. ^ Stephens, History of News (1988), p. 2. "Sensationalism appears to be a technique or style that is rooted somehow in the nature of the news. News obviously can do much more than merely sensationalize, but most news is, in an important sense, sensational: it is intended, in part, to arouse, to excite, often—whether the subject is a political scandal or a double murder—to shock."
  23. ^ a b Strömbäck, Jesper; Karlsson, Michael; Hopmann, Nicolas (2012). "Determinants of News Content: Comparing journalists' perceptions of the normative and actual impact of different event properties when deciding what's news". Journalism Studies. 13: 5–6. doi:10.1080/1461670X.2012.664321. S2CID 55642544.
  24. ^ Stephens, History of News (1988), pp. 26, 105–106.
  25. ^ Allan, News Culture (2004), p. 202.
  26. ^ "definition of newsworthiness by the Free Online Dictionary, Thesaurus, and Encyclopedia". Thefreedictionary.com. Retrieved 9 March 2012.
  27. ^ Stephens, History of News (1988), p. 33.
  28. ^ Stephens, History of News (1988), p. 31.
  29. ^ Stephens, History of News (1988), pp. 14, 305. "The desire to pass on tales of current events could be found even in Cultures that did not have writing—let alone printing presses or computers—to whet or satisfy their thirst for news. Observers have often remarked on the fierce concern with the news that they find in preliterate or semiliterate peoples. […] It is difficult, if not impossible, to find a society that does not exchange news and that does not build into its rituals and customs means for facilitating that exchange."
  30. ^ Stephens, History of News (1988), p 23.
  31. ^ Fang, History of Mass Communication (1997), p. 19.
  32. ^ Stephens, History of News (1988), p. 8. "A particularly lively forum for the exchange of news by word of mouth—the coffeehouse—flourished in England well after the development of the newspaper, and in some countries, the Coffeehouse has survived even the introduction of television."
  33. ^ Ayalon, The Press in the Arab Middle East: A History (1995), p. 5.
  34. ^ Lim, "Take Writing" (2006), pp. 1–6.
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  41. ^ Milner, "Fanno bandire" (2013), pp. 110–112.
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  45. ^ Milner, "Fanno bandire" (2013), p. 124.
  46. ^ Straubhaar and LaRose, Communications Media in the Information Society (1997), p. 366. "Another ancient form of advertising was the town crier, who told the citizenry about the 'good deal' to be found 'just around the corner'. Unlike the signs, which contained only information regarding the merchant, the criers also informed the citizens of the news of the day. Because the crier, or his agent, was compensated for his assistance in getting the advertising message out in the context of the news, there are interesting parallels with the newspaper of today (Applegate, 1993; Roche, 1993; Schramm, 1988)."
  47. ^ Ayalon, The Press in the Arab Middle East: A History (1995), p. 4.
  48. ^ a b Fang, History of Mass Communication (1997), pp. 14–15.
  49. ^ a b Stephens, History of News (1988), p. 27. "Whoever controlled the messengers could select which anecdotes and information would be favored by this treatment. Therefore, whoever controlled the messengers gained not only a conduit to the members of a society—the ability to inform them of new regulations—but gained a measure of power over the selection of news the members of a society received—the power, for example to ensure that they received news of triumphs but not necessarily of debacles. Messengers were controlled, for the most part, by kings, chiefs, headmen. They were rarely channels of dissent."
  50. ^ Kessler, "Royal Roads" (1995), p. 129. "The ability of the Assyrian court to challenge a huge and permanent stream of information seems to have been one of the essential factors for the long maintenance of Assyrian domination, over the vast areas in the Near East."
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  59. ^ Zhang, Origins of the Modern Chinese Press (2007), p. 14. "However, it was in the Tang dynasty that a specific bureau—the Bureau of Official Reports (Jin Zhouyuan)—was created to accommodate the local representatives. During this time, there were many rising powerful dukes, princes or governor-generals in charge of the large territories, equal in size to a modern province in China. These dukes or princes would naturally provide for their own news service at the capital Chang'an, which handled all official documents submitted by these representatives and transmitted imperial edicts in return. Recent archaeological research has uncovered such official reports from the Tang dynasty. Two archive documents of that period, originally found in Dunhuang have been regarded by Chinese scholars as the earliest forms of newspaper in the world (Fang 1997 53–8)"
  60. ^ Smith,The Newspaper: An International History (1979), p. 14. "At a later stage of its development, during the Sung period (960–1278), the ti pao was made to circulate among the purely intellectual groups, and during the Ming (1367–1644) was seen by a wider circle of society."
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  83. ^ Pettegree, The Invention of News (2014), pp. 6–8. "So this sort of news reporting was very different from the discreet, dispassionate services of the manuscript news men. News pamphlets were often committed and engaged, intended to persuade as well as inform. News also became, for the first time, part of the entertainment industry. What could be more entertaining than the tale of some catastrophe in a far-off place, or a grisly murder? This was not unproblematic, particularly for the traditional leaders of society who were used to news being part of a confidential service, provided by trusted agents."
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  99. ^ Starr, Creation of the Media (2004), p. 48. ["Tout est primitif et sauvage autour de lui, mais lui est pour ainsi dire le résultat de dix-huit siècles de travaux et d'expérience. Il porte le vêtement des villes, en parle la langue; sait le passé, est curieux de l'avenir, argumente sur le présent; c'est un homme très civilisé, qui, pour un temps, se soumet à vivre au milieu des bois, et qui s'enfonce dans les déserts du Nouveau Monde avec la Bible, une hache et des journaux."]
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  138. ^ Wolfe, Governing Soviet Journalism (2005), pp. 25–26. Translating Lenin: "Why instead of 200–400 lines you can't write in 20–10 lines about such simple, well-known, clear, and already mastered to a great degree, widespread phenomena like the base betrayals of the Mensheviks, those lackeys of the bourgeoisie, like the Anglo-Japanese invasion for the restoration of the holy law of capital; like the chattering teeth of the American millionaires against Germany, and so on, and so on. It is necessary to talk about this, it is necessary to register each new fact in this regard, but in a few lines; to pound out in 'telegraph style' the new appearances of old, already known and evaluated policies."
  139. ^ a b Boyd-Barrett, "'Global' News Agencies", in Boyd-Barrett & Rantanen, The Globalization of News (1998), pp. 23–24. "Earnings were generally derived from the sale of news services to media, financial or economic institutions, and governments, which were important as sources of revenue and as sources of intelligence, and it is generally considered that their news services reflected their respective national interests."
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  • Boyd-Barrett, Oliver, and Tehri Rantanen (eds.). The Globalization of News. (SAGE, 1998. ISBN 0-7619-5386-8).
  • Chakravartty, Paula, and Katharine Sarikakis. Media Policy and Globalization. Palgrave Macmillan, 2006. ISBN 1-4039-7738-0
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  • Pettegree, Andrew. The Invention of News: How the World Came to Know About Itself. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2014. ISBN 978-0-300-17908-8
  • Rampton, Sheldon, and John Stauber. Trust Us, We're Experts: How Industry Manipulates Science and Gambles With Your Future. New York: Jeremy P. Tarcher/Putnam, 2001. ISBN 1-58542-059-X
  • Salmon, Lucy Maynard. The Newspaper and the Historian. New York: Oxford University Press (American Branch), 1923.
  • Schudson, Michael. Discovering the News: A Social History of American Newspapers. New York: Basic Books, Inc., 1978. ISBN 0-465-01669-3
  • Shoemaker, Pamela J. and Akiba A. Cohen (eds.). News Around the World: Content, Practitioners, and the Public. New York, Routledge, 2006. ISBN 0-415-97505-0
  • Silberstein-Loeb, Jonathan. The International Distribution of News: The Associated Press, Press Association, and Reuters, 1848–1947 (2014)
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  • Wood, James. History of International Broadcasting. London: Peter Peregrinus Ltd., 1992. ISBN 0-86341-281-5
  • Zhang, Xiantao. The Origins of the Modern Chinese Press: The influence of the Protestant missionary press in late Qing China. Abingdon, UK: Routledge, 2007. ISBN 0-415-38066-9
  • Zhong, Bu. "Searching for Meaning: Multi-Level Cognitive Processing of News Decision Making Among U.S. and Chinese Journalists". Dissertation accepted at University of Maryland, College Park, 2006.

External links

  • News media by country at Curlie

news, other, uses, disambiguation, current, events, redirects, here, album, john, abercrombie, current, events, album, page, wikipedia, about, current, events, portal, current, events, information, about, current, events, this, provided, through, many, differe. For other uses see News disambiguation Current Events redirects here For the album by John Abercrombie see Current Events album For the page on Wikipedia about current events see Portal Current events News is information about current events This may be provided through many different media word of mouth printing postal systems broadcasting electronic communication or through the testimony of observers and witnesses to events News is sometimes called hard news to differentiate it from soft media Al Jazeera English newsroom Doha 2011 Common topics for news reports include war government politics education health the environment economy business fashion entertainment and sport as well as quirky or unusual events Government proclamations concerning royal ceremonies laws taxes public health and criminals have been dubbed news since ancient times Technological and social developments often driven by government communication and espionage networks have increased the speed with which news can spread as well as influenced its content Throughout history people have transported new information through oral means Having developed in China over centuries newspapers became established in Europe during the early modern period In the 20th century radio and television became an important means of transmitting news Whilst in the 21st the internet has also begun to play a similar role Contents 1 Meaning 1 1 Etymology 1 2 Newness 1 3 Commodity 1 4 Tone 1 5 Newsworthiness 2 History 2 1 Folk news 2 2 Government proclamations 2 3 Early news networks 2 3 1 Asia 2 3 2 Europe 2 4 Rise of the newspaper 2 5 Newswire 2 6 Radio and television 2 7 Internet 3 News media today 3 1 Newspaper 3 2 Television 3 3 Internet 4 News agencies 5 Global news system 5 1 New World Information and Communication Order 5 2 Further transformation in global news flow 6 News values 7 Social organization of news production 7 1 News organizations 7 2 Relationship with institutions 7 3 State control 7 4 Public relations 8 News consumption 8 1 Social and cultural cohesion 8 2 Public sphere 8 3 News events 8 4 News making 8 5 Psychological effects 8 6 Influence 9 Influence of sponsorship 10 See also 11 References 12 Sources and further reading 13 External linksMeaning EditEtymology Edit The English word news developed in the 14th century as a special use of the plural form of new In Middle English the equivalent word was newes like the French nouvelles and the German Neues Similar developments are found in the Slavic languages namely cognates from Serbo Croatian novost from nov new Czech and Slovak noviny from novy new the Polish nowiny the Bulgarian novini and Russian novosti and likewise in the Celtic languages the Welsh newyddion from newydd and the Cornish nowodhow from nowydh 1 2 Jessica Garretson Finch is credited with coining the phrase current events while teaching at Barnard College in the 1890s 3 Newness Edit As its name implies news typically connotes the presentation of new information 4 5 The newness of news gives it an uncertain quality which distinguishes it from the more careful investigations of history or other scholarly disciplines 5 6 7 Whereas historians tend to view events as causally related manifestations of underlying processes news stories tend to describe events in isolation and to exclude discussion of the relationships between them 8 News conspicuously describes the world in the present or immediate past even when the most important aspects of a news story have occurred long in the past or are expected to occur in the future To make the news an ongoing process must have some peg an event in time that anchors it to the present moment 8 9 Relatedly news often addresses aspects of reality which seem unusual deviant or out of the ordinary 10 Hence the famous dictum that Dog Bites Man is not news but Man Bites Dog is 11 Another corollary of the newness of news is that as new technology enables new media to disseminate news more quickly slower forms of communication may move away from news towards analysis 12 Commodity Edit According to some theories news is whatever the news industry sells 13 Journalism broadly understood along the same lines is the act or occupation of collecting and providing news 14 15 From a commercial perspective news is simply one input along with paper or an electronic server necessary to prepare a final product for distribution 16 A news agency supplies this resource wholesale and publishers enhance it for retail 17 18 Tone Edit Most purveyors of news value impartiality neutrality and objectivity despite the inherent difficulty of reporting without political bias 19 Perception of these values has changed greatly over time as sensationalized tabloid journalism has risen in popularity Michael Schudson has argued that before the era of World War I and the concomitant rise of propaganda journalists were not aware of the concept of bias in reporting let alone actively correcting for it 20 News is also sometimes said to portray the truth but this relationship is elusive and qualified 21 Paradoxically another property commonly attributed to news is sensationalism the disproportionate focus on and exaggeration of emotive stories for public consumption 22 23 This news is also not unrelated to gossip the human practice of sharing information about other humans of mutual interest 24 A common sensational topic is violence hence another news dictum if it bleeds it leads 25 Newsworthiness Edit Newsworthiness is defined as a subject having sufficient relevance to the public or a special audience to warrant press attention or coverage 26 News values seem to be common across cultures People seem to be interested in news to the extent which it has a big impact describes conflicts happens nearby involves well known people and deviates from the norms of everyday happenings 27 War is a common news topic partly because it involves unknown events that could pose personal danger 28 History EditSee also History of telecommunication Folk news Edit Evidence suggests that cultures around the world have found a place for people to share stories about interesting new information Among Zulus Mongolians Polynesians and American Southerners anthropologists have documented the practice of questioning travelers for news as a matter of priority 29 Sufficiently important news would be repeated quickly and often and could spread by word of mouth over a large geographic area 30 Even as printing presses came into use in Europe news for the general public often travelled orally via monks travelers town criers etc 31 The news is also transmitted in public gathering places such as the Greek forum and the Roman baths Starting in England coffeehouses served as important sites for the spread of news even after telecommunications became widely available The history of the coffee houses is traced from Arab countries which was introduced in England in the 16th century 32 In the Muslim world people have gathered and exchanged news at mosques and other social places Travelers on pilgrimages to Mecca traditionally stay at caravanserais roadside inns along the way and these places have naturally served as hubs for gaining news of the world 33 In late medieval Britain reports tidings of major events were a topic of great public interest as chronicled in Chaucer s 1380 The House of Fame and other works 34 Government proclamations Edit Woodcut by Tommaso Garzoni depicting a town crier with a trumpet Before the invention of newspapers in the early 17th century official government bulletins and edicts were circulated at times in some centralized empires 35 The first documented use of an organized courier service for the diffusion of written documents is in Egypt where Pharaohs used couriers for the diffusion of their decrees in the territory of the State 2400 BC 36 Julius Caesar regularly publicized his heroic deeds in Gaul and upon becoming dictator of Rome began publishing government announcements called Acta Diurna These were carved in metal or stone and posted in public places 37 38 In medieval England parliamentary declarations were delivered to sheriffs for public display and reading at the market 39 Specially sanctioned messengers have been recognized in Vietnamese culture among the Khasi people in India and in the Fox and Winnebago cultures of the American midwest The Zulu Kingdom used runners to quickly disseminate news In West Africa news can be spread by griots In most cases the official spreaders of news have been closely aligned with holders of political power 40 Town criers were a common means of conveying information to citydwellers In thirteenth century Florence criers known as banditori arrived in the market regularly to announce political news to convoke public meetings and to call the populace to arms In 1307 and 1322 1325 laws were established governing their appointment conduct and salary These laws stipulated how many times a banditoro was to repeat a proclamation forty and where in the city they were to read them 41 Different declarations sometimes came with additional protocols announcements regarding the plague were also to be read at the city gates 42 These proclamations all used a standard format beginning with an exordium The worshipful and most esteemed gentlemen of the Eight of Ward and Security of the city of Florence make it known notify and expressly command to whosoever of whatever status rank quality and condition and continuing with a statement narratio a request made upon the listeners petitio and the penalty to be exacted from those who would not comply peroratio 43 In addition to major declarations bandi announcements might concern petty crimes requests for information and notices about missing slaves 44 Niccolo Machiavelli was captured by the Medicis in 1513 following a bando calling for his immediate surrender 45 Some town criers could be paid to include advertising along with news 46 Under the Ottoman Empire official messages were regularly distributed at mosques by traveling holy men and by secular criers These criers were sent to read official announcements in marketplaces highways and other well traveled places sometimes issuing commands and penalties for disobedience 47 Early news networks Edit The spread of news has always been linked to the communications networks in place to disseminate it Thus political religious and commercial interests have historically controlled expanded and monitored communications channels by which news could spread Postal services have long been closely entwined with the maintenance of political power in a large area 48 49 One of the imperial communication channels called the Royal Road traversed the Assyrian Empire and served as a key source of its power 50 The Roman Empire maintained a vast network of roads known as cursus publicus for similar purposes 51 Visible chains of long distance signaling known as optical telegraphy have also been used throughout history to convey limited types of information These can have ranged from smoke and fire signals to advanced systems using semaphore codes and telescopes 52 53 The latter form of optical telegraph came into use in Japan Britain France and Germany from the 1790s through the 1850s 54 55 Asia Edit Reproduction of Kaiyuan Za Bao court newspaper from the Tang dynasty The world s first written news may have originated in eighth century BCE China where reports gathered by officials were eventually compiled as the Spring and Autumn Annals The annals whose compilation is attributed to Confucius were available to a sizeable reading public and dealt with common news themes though they straddle the line between news and history 56 The Han dynasty is credited with developing one of the most effective imperial surveillance and communications networks in the ancient world 57 Government produced news sheets called tipao circulated among court officials during the late Han dynasty second and third centuries AD Between 713 and 734 the Kaiyuan Za Bao Bulletin of the Court of the Chinese Tang Dynasty published government news it was handwritten on silk and read by government officials 58 The court created a Bureau of Official Reports Jin Zhouyuan to centralize news distribution for the court 59 Newsletters called ch ao pao continued to be produced and gained wider public circulation in the following centuries 60 In 1582 there was the first reference to privately published newssheets in Beijing during the late Ming Dynasty 61 62 Japan had effective communications and postal delivery networks at several points in its history first in 646 with the Taika Reform and again during the Kamakura period from 1183 to 1333 The system depended on hikyaku runners and regularly spaced relay stations By this method news could travel between Kyoto and Kamakura in 5 7 days Special horse mounted messengers could move information at the speed of 170 kilometers per day 55 63 The Japanese shogunates were less tolerant than the Chinese government of news circulation 58 The postal system established during the Edo period was even more effective with average speeds of 125 150 km day and express speed of 200 km day This system was initially used only by the government taking private communications only at exorbitant prices Private services emerged and in 1668 established their own nakama guild They became even faster and created an effective optical telegraphy system using flags by day and lanterns and mirrors by night 55 Europe Edit In Europe during the Middle Ages elites relied on runners to transmit news over long distances At 33 kilometres per day a runner would take two months to bring a message across the Hanseatic League from Bruges to Riga 64 65 In the early modern period increased cross border interaction created a rising need for information which was met by concise handwritten newssheets The driving force of this new development was the commercial advantage provided by up to date news 7 66 In 1556 the government of Venice first published the monthly Notizie scritte which cost one gazetta 67 These avvisi were handwritten newsletters and used to convey political military and economic news quickly and efficiently to Italian cities 1500 1700 sharing some characteristics of newspapers though usually not considered true newspapers 68 Avvisi were sold by subscription under the auspices of military religious and banking authorities Sponsorship flavored the contents of each series which were circulated under many different names Subscribers included clerics diplomatic staff and noble families By the last quarter of the seventeenth century long passages from avvisi were finding their way into published monthlies such as the Mercure de France and in northern Italy Pallade veneta 69 70 71 Some European postal routes in 1563 Postal services enabled merchants and monarchs to stay abreast of important information For the Holy Roman Empire Emperor Maximillian I in 1490 authorized two brothers from the Italian Tasso family Francesco and Janetto to create a network of courier stations linked by riders They began with a communications line between Innsbruck and Mechelen and grew from there 72 In 1505 this network expanded to Spain new governed by Maximilian s son Philip These riders could travel 180 kilometers in a day 73 This system became the Imperial Reichspost administered by Tasso descendants subsequently known as Thurn und Taxis who in 1587 received exclusive operating rights from the Emperor 72 The French postal service and English postal service also began at this time but did not become comprehensive until the early 1600s 72 74 75 In 1620 the English system linked with Thurn und Taxis 53 These connections underpinned an extensive system of news circulation with handwritten items bearing dates and places of origin Centred in Germany the network took in news from Russia the Balkans Italy Britain France and the Netherlands 76 The German lawyer Christoph von Scheurl and the Fugger house of Augsburg were prominent hubs in this network 77 Letters describing historically significant events could gain wide circulation as news reports Indeed personal correspondence sometimes acted only as a convenient channel through which news could flow across a larger network 78 A common type of business communication was a simple listing of current prices the circulation of which quickened the flow of international trade 79 80 Businesspeople also wanted to know about events related to shipping the affairs of other businesses and political developments 79 Even after the advent of international newspapers business owners still valued correspondence highly as a source of reliable news that would affect their enterprise 81 Handwritten newsletters which could be produced quickly for a limited clientele also continued into the 1600s 77 Rise of the newspaper Edit The London Gazette Published By Authority of the Stationers Company on 3 December 1909 See also History of newspapers and magazines The spread of paper and the printing press from China to Europe preceded a major advance in the transmission of news 82 With the spread of printing presses and the creation of new markets in the 1500s news underwent a shift from factual and precise economic reporting to a more emotive and freewheeling format Private newsletters containing important intelligence therefore remained in use by people who needed to know 83 The first newspapers emerged in Germany in the early 1600s 84 Relation aller Furnemmen und gedenckwurdigen Historien from 1605 is recognized as the world s first formalized newspaper 85 while not a newspaper in the modern sense the Ancient Roman Acta Diurna served a similar purpose circa 131 BC The new format which mashed together numerous unrelated and perhaps dubious reports from far flung locations created a radically new and jarring experience for its readers 86 A variety of styles emerged from single story tales to compilations overviews and personal and impersonal types of news analysis 87 News for public consumption was at first tightly controlled by governments By 1530 England had created a licensing system for the press and banned seditious opinions 88 Under the Licensing Act publication was restricted to approved presses as exemplified by The London Gazette which prominently bore the words Published By Authority 89 Parliament allowed the Licensing Act to lapse in 1695 beginning a new era marked by Whig and Tory newspapers 90 During this era the Stamp Act limited newspaper distribution simply by making them expensive to sell and buy In France censorship was even more constant 91 Consequently many Europeans read newspapers originating from beyond their national borders especially from the Dutch Republic where publishers could evade state censorship 92 The new United States saw a newspaper boom beginning with the Revolutionary era accelerated by spirited debates over the establishment of a new government spurred on by subsidies contained in the 1792 Postal Service Act and continuing into the 1800s 93 94 American newspapers got many of their stories by copying reports from each other Thus by offering free postage to newspapers wishing to exchange copies the Postal Service Act subsidized a rapidly growing news network through which different stories could percolate 95 Newspapers thrived during the colonization of the West fueled by high literacy and a newspaper loving culture 96 By 1880 San Francisco rivaled New York in number of different newspapers and in printed newspaper copies per capita 97 Boosters of new towns felt that newspapers covering local events brought legitimacy recognition and community 98 The 1830s American wrote Alexis de Tocqueville was a very civilized man prepared for a time to face life in the forest plunging into the wilderness of the New World with his Bible ax and newspapers 99 In France the Revolution brought forth an abundance of newspapers and a new climate of press freedom followed by a return to repression under Napoleon 100 In 1792 the Revolutionaries set up a news ministry called the Bureau d Esprit 101 Some newspapers published in the 1800s and after retained the commercial orientation characteristic of the private newsletters of the Renaissance Economically oriented newspapers published new types of data enabled the advent of statistics especially economic statistics which could inform sophisticated investment decisions 102 These newspapers too became available for larger sections of society not just elites keen on investing some of their savings in the stock markets Yet as in the case other newspapers the incorporation of advertising into the newspaper led to justified reservations about accepting newspaper information at face value 103 Economic newspapers also became promoters of economic ideologies such as Keynesianism in the mid 1900s 104 Newspapers came to sub Saharan Africa via colonization The first English language newspaper in the area was The Royal Gazette and Sierra Leone Advertiser established in 1801 and followed by The Royal Gold Coast Gazette and Commercial Intelligencer in 1822 and the Liberia Herald in 1826 105 A number of nineteenth century African newspapers were established by missionaries 106 These newspapers by and large promoted the colonial governments and served the interests of European settlers by relaying news from Europe 106 The first newspaper published in a native African language was the Muigwithania published in Kikuyu by the Kenyan Central Association 106 Muigwithania and other newspapers published by indigenous Africans took strong opposition stances agitating strongly for African independence 107 Newspapers were censored heavily during the colonial period as well as after formal independence Some liberalization and diversification took place in the 1990s 108 Newspapers were slow to spread to the Arab world which had a stronger tradition of oral communication and mistrust of the European approach to news reporting By the end of the eighteenth century the Ottoman Empire s leaders in Istanbul monitored the European press but its contents were not disseminated for mass consumption 109 Some of the first written news in modern North Africa arose in Egypt under Muhammad Ali who developed the local paper industry and initiated the limited circulation of news bulletins called jurnals 110 Beginning in the 1850s and 1860s the private press began to develop in the multi religious country of Lebanon 111 Newswire Edit The development of the electrical telegraph which often travelled along railroad lines enabled news to travel faster over longer distances 112 Days before Morse s Baltimore Washington line transmitted the famous question What hath God wrought it transmitted the news that Henry Clay and Theodore Frelinghuysen had been chosen by the Whig nominating party 37 Telegraph networks enabled a new centralization of the news in the hands of wire services concentrated in major cities The modern form of these originated with Charles Louis Havas who founded Bureau Havas later Agence France Presse in Paris Havas began in 1832 using the French government s optical telegraph network In 1840 he began using pigeons for communications to Paris London and Brussels Havas began to use the electric telegraph when it became available 113 One of Havas s proteges Bernhard Wolff founded Wolffs Telegraphisches Bureau in Berlin in 1849 114 Another Havas disciple Paul Reuter began collecting news from Germany and France in 1849 and in 1851 immigrated to London where he established the Reuters news agency specializing in news from the continent 115 In 1863 William Saunders and Edward Spender formed the Central Press agency later called the Press Association to handle domestic news 116 Just before insulated telegraph line crossed the English Channel in 1851 Reuter won the right to transmit stock exchange prices between Paris and London 117 He maneuvered Reuters into a dominant global position with the motto Follow the Cable setting up news outposts across the British Empire in Alexandria 1865 Bombay 1866 Melbourne 1874 Sydney 1874 and Cape Town 1876 117 118 In the United States the Associated Press became a news powerhouse gaining a lead position through an exclusive arrangement with the Western Union company 119 The telegraph ushered in a new global communications regime accompanied by a restructuring of the national postal systems and closely followed by the advent of telephone lines With the value of international news at a premium governments businesses and news agencies moved aggressively to reduce transmission times In 1865 Reuters had the scoop on the Lincoln assassination reporting the news in England twelve days after the event took place 120 In 1866 an undersea telegraph cable successfully connected Ireland to Newfoundland and thus the Western Union network cutting trans Atlantic transmission time from days to hours 121 122 123 The transatlantic cable allowed fast exchange of information about the London and New York stock exchanges as well as the New York Chicago and Liverpool commodity exchanges for the price of 5 10 in gold per word 124 Transmitting On 11 May 1857 a young British telegraph operator in Delhi signaled home to alert the authorities of the Indian Rebellion of 1857 The rebels proceeded to disrupt the British telegraph network which was rebuilt with more redundancies 125 In 1902 1903 Britain and the U S completed the circumtelegraphy of the planet with transpacific cables from Canada to Fiji and New Zealand British Empire and from the US to Hawaii and the occupied Philippines 126 U S reassertions of the Monroe Doctrine notwithstanding Latin America was a battleground of competing telegraphic interests until World War I after which U S interests finally did consolidate their power in the hemisphere 127 World railway and telegraph system 1900 By the turn of the century i e circa 1900 Wolff Havas and Reuters formed a news cartel dividing up the global market into three sections in which each had more or less exclusive distribution rights and relationships with national agencies 128 Each agency s area corresponded roughly to the colonial sphere of its mother country 129 Reuters and the Australian national news service had an agreement to exchange news only with each other 130 Due to the high cost of maintaining infrastructure political goodwill and global reach newcomers found it virtually impossible to challenge the big three European agencies or the American Associated Press 131 In 1890 Reuters in partnership with the Press Association England s major news agency for domestic stories expanded into soft news stories for public consumption about topics such as sports and human interest 132 In 1904 the big three wire services opened relations with Vestnik the news agency of Czarist Russia to their group though they maintained their own reporters in Moscow 133 During and after the Russian Revolution the outside agencies maintained a working relationship with the Petrograd Telegraph Agency renamed the Russian Telegraph Agency ROSTA and eventually the Telegraph Agency of the Soviet Union TASS 134 The Chinese Communist Party created its news agency the Red China News Agency in 1931 its primary responsibilities were the Red China newspaper and the internal Reference News In 1937 the Party renamed the agency Xinhua New China Xinhua became the official news agency of the People s Republic of China in 1949 135 These agencies touted their ability to distill events into minute globules of news 20 30 word summaries which conveyed the essence of new developments 134 Unlike newspapers and contrary to the sentiments of some of their reporters the agencies sought to keep their reports simple and factual 136 The wire services brought forth the inverted pyramid model of news copy in which key facts appear at the start of the text and more and more details are included as it goes along 121 The sparse telegraphic writing style spilled over into newspapers which often reprinted stories from the wire with little embellishment 18 137 In a 20 September 1918 Pravda editorial Lenin instructed the Soviet press to cut back on their political rambling and produce many short anticapitalist news items in telegraph style 138 As in previous eras the news agencies provided special services to political and business clients and these services constituted a significant portion of their operations and income The wire services maintained close relationships with their respective national governments which provided both press releases and payments 139 The acceleration and centralization of economic news facilitated regional economic integration and economic globalization It was the decrease in information costs and the increasing communication speed that stood at the roots of increased market integration rather than falling transport costs by itself In order to send goods to another area merchants needed to know first whether in fact to send off the goods and to what place Information costs and speed were essential for these decisions 140 Radio and television Edit The British Broadcasting Company began transmitting radio news from London in 1922 dependent entirely by law on the British news agencies 141 BBC radio marketed itself as a news by and for social elites and hired only broadcasters who spoke with upper class accents 142 The BBC gained importance in the May 1926 general strike during which newspapers were closed and the radio served as the only source of news for an uncertain public To the displeasure of many listeners the BBC took an unambiguously pro government stance against the strikers 141 143 In the US RCA s Radio Group established its radio network NBC in 1926 The Paley family founded CBS soon after These two networks which supplied news broadcasts to subsidiaries and affiliates dominated the airwaves throughout the period of radio s hegemony as a news source 144 Radio broadcasters in the United States negotiated a similar arrangement with the press in 1933 when they agreed to use only news from the Press Radio Bureau and eschew advertising this agreement soon collapsed and radio stations began reporting their own news with advertising 145 As in Britain American news radio avoided controversial topics as per norms established by the National Association of Broadcasters 146 By 1939 58 of Americans surveyed by Fortune considered radio news more accurate than newspapers and 70 chose radio as their main news source 146 Radio expanded rapidly across the continent from 30 stations in 1920 to a thousand in the 1930s This operation was financed mostly with advertising and public relations money 147 The Soviet Union began a major international broadcasting operation in 1929 with stations in German English and French The Nazi Party made use of the radio in its rise to power in Germany with much of its propaganda focused on attacking the Soviet Bolsheviks The British and Italian foreign radio services competed for influence in North Africa All four of these broadcast services grew increasingly vitriolic as the European nations prepared for war 148 The war provided an opportunity to expand radio and take advantage of its new potential The BBC reported on Allied invasion of Normandy on 8 00 a m of the morning it took place and including a clip from German radio coverage of the same event Listeners followed along with developments throughout the day 149 The U S set up its Office of War Information which by 1942 sent programming across South America the Middle East and East Asia 150 Radio Luxembourg a centrally located high power station on the continent was seized by Germany and then by the United States which created fake news programs appearing as though they were created by Germany 151 Targeting American troops in the Pacific the Japanese government broadcast the Zero Hour program which included news from the U S to make the soldiers homesick 152 But by the end of the war Britain had the largest radio network in the world broadcasting internationally in 43 different languages 153 Its scope would eventually be surpassed by 1955 by the worldwide Voice of America programs produced by the United States Information Agency 154 In Britain and the United States television news watching rose dramatically in the 1950s and by the 1960s supplanted radio as the public s primary source of news 155 In the U S television was run by the same networks which owned radio CBS NBC and an NBC spin off called ABC 156 Edward R Murrow who first entered the public ear as a war reporter in London made the big leap to television to become an iconic newsman on CBS and later the director of the United States Information Agency 157 Ted Turner s creation of the Cable News Network CNN in 1980 inaugurated a new era of 24 hour satellite news broadcasting In 1991 the BBC introduced a competitor BBC World Service Television Rupert Murdoch s Australian News Corporation entered the picture with Fox News Channel in the US Sky News in Britain and STAR TV in Asia 158 Combining this new apparatus with the use of embedded reporters the United States waged the 1991 1992 Gulf War with the assistance of nonstop media coverage 159 CNN s specialty is the crisis to which the network is prepared to shift its total attention if so chosen 160 CNN news was transmitted via INTELSAT communications satellites 161 CNN said an executive would bring a town crier to the global village 162 In 1996 the Qatar owned broadcaster Al Jazeera emerged as a powerful alternative to the Western media capitalizing in part on anger in the Arab amp Muslim world regarding biased coverage of the Gulf War Al Jazeera hired many news workers conveniently laid off by BBC Arabic Television which closed in April 1996 It used Arabsat to broadcast 158 Internet Edit The early internet known as ARPANET was controlled by the U S Department of Defense and used mostly by academics It became available to a wider public with the release of the Netscape browser in 1994 163 At first news websites were mostly archives of print publications 164 An early online newspaper was the Electronic Telegraph published by The Daily Telegraph 165 166 A 1994 earthquake in California was one of the first big stories to be reported online in real time 167 The new availability of web browsing made news sites accessible to more people 167 On the day of the Oklahoma City bombing in April 1995 people flocked to newsgroups and chatrooms to discuss the situation and share information The Oklahoma City Daily posted news to its site within hours Two of the only news sites capable of hosting images the San Jose Mercury News and Time magazine posted photographs of the scene 167 Quantitatively the internet has massively expanded the sheer volume of news items available to one person The speed of news flow to individuals has also reached a new plateau 168 This insurmountable flow of news can daunt people and cause information overload Zbigniew Brzezinski called this period the technetronic era in which global reality increasingly absorbs the individual involves him and even occasionally overwhelms him 169 In cases of government crackdowns or revolutions the Internet has often become a major communication channel for news propagation while it s a relatively simple act to shut down a newspaper radio or television station mobile devices such as smartphones and netbooks are much harder to detect and confiscate The propagation of internet capable mobile devices has also given rise to the citizen journalist who provide an additional perspective on unfolding events News media today EditFurther information News media News can travel through different communication media 17 In modern times printed news had to be phoned into a newsroom or brought there by a reporter where it was typed and either transmitted over wire services or edited and manually set in type along with other news stories for a specific edition Today the term breaking news has become trite as commercial broadcasting United States cable news services that are available 24 hours a day use live communications satellite technology to bring current events into consumers homes as the event occurs Events that used to take hours or days to become common knowledge in towns or in nations are fed instantaneously to consumers via radio television mobile phone and the internet Speed of news transmission of course still varies wildly on the basis of where and how one lives 170 Newspaper Edit A newspaper is one of the most common ways to receive the latest news Main article Newspaper Most large cities in the United States historically had morning and afternoon newspapers With the addition of new communications media afternoon newspapers have shut down and morning newspapers have lost circulation Weekly newspapers have somewhat increased 171 In more and more cities newspapers have established local market monopolies i e a single newspaper is the only one in town This process has accelerated since the 1980s commensurate with a general trend of consolidation in media ownership 172 In China too newspapers have gained exclusive status city by city and pooled into large associations such as Chengdu Business News These associations function like news agencies challenging the hegemony of Xinhua as a news provider 135 The world s top three most circulated newspapers all publish from Japan About one third of newspaper revenue comes from sales the majority comes from advertising 173 Newspapers have struggled to maintain revenue given declining circulation and the free flow of information over the internet some have implemented paywalls for their websites 165 In the U S many newspapers have shifted their operations online publishing around the clock rather than daily in order to keep pace with the internet society Prognosticators have suggested that print newspapers will vanish from the U S in 5 20 years 165 Many newspapers have started to track social media engagement for trending news stories to cover Television Edit Internationally distributed news channels include BBC News CNN Fox News MSNBC CBC News Network and Sky News Televisions are densely concentrated in the United States 98 of households and the average American watches 4 hours of television programming each day In other parts of the world such as Kenya especially rural areas without much electricity televisions are rare 170 The largest supplier of international video news is Reuters TV with 409 subscribers in 83 countries 38 bureaus and a reported audience of 1 5 billion people each day The other major video news service is Associated Press Television News These two major agencies have agreements to exchange video news with ABC NBC CBS CNN and Eurovision itself a sizeable video news exchange 174 CNN International is a notable broadcaster in times of crisis 160 Internet Edit Online journalism is news that is reported on the internet News can be delivered more quickly through this method of news as well as accessed more easily The internet era has transformed the understanding of news Because the internet allows communication which is not only instantaneous but also bi or multi directional it has blurred the boundaries of who is a legitimate news producer A common type of internet journalism is called blogging which is a service of persistently written articles uploaded and written by one or more individuals Millions of people in countries such as the United States and South Korea have taken up blogging Many blogs have rather small audiences some blogs are read by millions each month 175 Social media sites especially Twitter and Facebook have become an important source of breaking news information and for disseminating links to news websites Twitter declared in 2012 It s like being delivered a newspaper whose headlines you ll always find interesting you can discover news as it s happening learn more about topics that are important to you and get the inside scoop in real time 176 Cell phone cameras have normalized citizen photojournalism 177 Michael Schudson professor at the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism has said that e verything we thought we once knew about journalism needs to be rethought in the Digital Age 178 Today the work of journalism can be done from anywhere and done well It requires no more than a reporter and a laptop In that way journalistic authority seems to have become more individual and less institution based But does the individual reporter always have to be an actual journalist Or can journalistic work be done from anywhere and by anyone These are questions that refer to the core of journalistic practice and the definition of news itself As Schudson has given emphasis to the answer is not easily found the ground journalists walk upon is shaking and the experience for both those who work in the field and those on the outside studying it is dizzying 178 Schudson has identified the following six specific areas where the ecology of news in his opinion has changed The line between the reader and writer has blurred The distinction among tweet blog post Facebook newspaper story magazine article and book has blurred The line between professionals and amateurs has blurred and a variety of pro am relationships has emerged The boundaries delineating for profit public and non profit media have blurred and the cooperation across these models of financing has developed Within commercial news organizations the line between the news room and the business office has blurred The line between old media and new media has blurred practically beyond recognition 179 These alterations inevitably have fundamental ramifications for the contemporary ecology of news The boundaries of journalism which just a few years ago seemed relatively clear and permanent have become less distinct and this blurring while potentially the foundation of progress even as it is the source of risk has given rise to a new set of journalistic principles and practices 180 Schudson puts it It is indeed complex but it seems to be the future Online news has also changed the geographic reach of individual news stories diffusing readership from city by city markets to a potentially global audience 165 The growth of social media networks have also created new opportunities for automated and efficient news gathering for journalists and newsrooms Many newsrooms broadcasters newspapers magazines radio and TV have started to perform news gathering on social media platforms Social media is creating changes in the consumer behaviour and news consumption According to a study by Pew Research a large portion of Americans read news on digital and on mobile devices Because internet does not have the column inches limitation of print media online news stories can but don t always come bundled with supplementary material The medium of the World Wide Web also enables hyperlinking which allows readers to navigate to other pages related to the one they re reading 165 Despite these changes some studies have concluded that internet news coverage remains fairly homogenous and dominated by news agencies 181 182 And journalists working with online media do not identify significantly different criteria for newsworthiness than print journalists 23 News agencies EditMain article News agency Reuters office in Bonn Germany 1988 News agencies are services which compile news and disseminate it in bulk Because they disseminate information to a wide variety of clients who repackage the material as news for public consumption news agencies tend to use less controversial language in their reports Despite their importance news agencies are not well known by the general public They keep low profiles and their reporters usually do not get bylines 18 183 The oldest news agency still operating is the Agence France Presse AFP 184 It was founded in 1835 by a Parisian translator and advertising agent Charles Louis Havas as Agence Havas By the end of the twentieth century Reuters far outpaced the other news agencies in profits and became one of the largest companies in Europe 185 In 2011 Thomson Reuters employed more than 55 000 people in 100 countries and posted an annual revenue of 12 9 billion 18 United Press International gained prominence as a world news agency in the middle of the twentieth century but shrank in the 1980s and was sold off at low prices It is owned by the Unification Church company News World Communications News agencies especially Reuters and the newly important Bloomberg News convey both news stories for mass audiences and financial information of interest to businesses and investors 186 187 Bloomberg LP a private company founded by Michael Bloomberg in 1981 made rapid advances with computerized stock market reporting updated in real time Its news service continued to exploit this electronic advantage by combining computer generated analytics with text reporting Bloomberg linked with Agence France Presse in the 1990s 187 Following the marketization of the Chinese economy and the media boom of the 1990s Xinhua has adopted some commercial practices including subscription fees but it remains government subsidized It provides newswire news photos economic information and audio and video news Xinhua has a growing number of subscribers totaling 16 969 in 2002 including 93 of Chinese newspapers 135 It operates 123 foreign bureaus and produces 300 news stories each day 188 Other agencies with considerable reach include Deutsche Presse Agentur Germany Kyodo News Japan the Agenzia Nazionale Stampa Associata Italy the Middle East News Agency Egypt Tanjug Serbia EFE Spain and Anadolu Agency Turkey 189 On the internet news aggregators play a role similar to that of the news agency and because of the sources they select tend to transmit news stories which originate from the main agencies Of articles displayed by Yahoo News in the U S 91 7 come from news agencies 39 4 from AP 30 9 AFP and 21 3 Reuters In India 60 1 of Yahoo News stories come from Reuters Google News relies somewhat less on news agencies and has shown high volatility in the sense of focusing heavily on the most recent handful of salient world events 181 In 2010 Google News redesigned its front page with automatic geotargeting which generated a selection of local news items for every viewer 190 Global news system EditIn the 20th century global news coverage was dominated by a combination of the Big Four news agencies Reuters Associated Press Agence France Press and United Press International representing the Western bloc and the Communist agencies TASS from the Soviet Union and Xinhua from China 191 Studies of major world events and analyses of all international news coverage in various newspapers consistently found that a large majority of news items originated from the four biggest wire services 181 Television news agencies include Associated Press Television News which bought and incorporated World Television News and Reuters Television 174 192 Bloomberg News created in the 1990s expanded rapidly to become a player in the realm of international news 186 The Associated Press also maintains a radio network with thousands of subscribers worldwide it is the sole provider of international news to many small stations 174 By some accounts dating back to the 1940s the increasing interconnectedness of the news system has accelerated the pace of human history itself 193 New World Information and Communication Order Edit The global news system is dominated by agencies from Europe and the United States and reflects their interests and priorities in its coverage 194 Euro American control of the global news system has led to criticism that events around the world are constantly compared to events like the Holocaust and World War II which are considered foundational in the West 195 Since the 1960s a significant amount of news reporting from the Third World has been characterized by some form development journalism a paradigm which focuses on long term development projects social change and nation building 196 When in 1987 the U S media reported on a riot in the Dominican Republic the first major news item regarding that country in years the resulting decline in tourism lasted for years and had a noticeable effect on the economy 197 The English language predominates in global news exchanges 198 Critics have accused the global news system of perpetuating cultural imperialism 162 199 200 Critics further charge that the Western media conglomerates maintain a bias towards the status quo economic order especially a pro corporate bias 199 The United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization UNESCO has promoted a New World Information and Communication Order which envisions an international news exchange system involving national news agencies in every country UNESCO encouraged the new states formed from colonial territories in the 1960s to establish news agencies to generate domestic news stories exchange news items with international partners and disseminate both types of news internally 201 Along these lines the 1980 MacBride report Many Voices One World called for an interdependent global news system with more participation from different governments To this end also UNESCO formed the Non Aligned News Agencies Pool 202 The Inter Press Service founded in 1964 has served as an intermediary for Third World press agencies 203 Inter Press Service s editorial policy favors coverage of events institutions and issues which relate to inequality economic development economic integration natural resources population health education and sustainable development 204 It gives less coverage than other agencies to crime disasters and violence Geographically 70 of its news reporting concerns Africa Asia Latin America and the Caribbean 205 IPS has the most subscribers in Latin America and southern Africa 204 IPS receives grants from organizations such as the United Nations Development Program and other United Nations agencies and private foundations to report news on chosen topics including the environment sustainable development and women s issues 206 Beginning in the 1960s the United States Agency for International Development the National Aeronautics and Space Administration and UNESCO developed the use of satellite television for international broadcasting In India 1975 1976 these agencies implemented an experimental satellite television system called the Satellite Instructional Television Experiment with assistance from the Indian Space Research Organisation and All India Radio 207 Further transformation in global news flow Edit By the 1980s much of the Third World had succumbed to a debt crisis resulting from unpayable large loans accumulated since the 1960s At this point the World Bank took an active role in the governance of many countries and its authority extended to communications policy The policy of developing Third World media gave way to a global regime of free trade institutions like the World Trade Organization which also protected the free flow of information across borders 208 The World Bank also promoted privatization of national telecommunications which afforded large multinational corporations the opportunity to purchase networks and expand operations in the Third World 209 210 In countries with less telecommunications infrastructure people especially youth tend today to get their news predominantly from mobile phones and less so from the internet Older folks listen more to the radio The government of China is a major investor in Third World telecommunications especially in Africa 211 Some issues relating to global information flow were revisited in light of the internet at the 2003 2005 World Summit on the Information Society a conference which emphasized the role of civil society and the private sector in information society governance 212 News values EditMain article News values News values are the professional norms of journalism Commonly news content should contain all the Five Ws who what when where why and also how of an event Newspapers normally place hard news stories on the first pages so the most important information is at the beginning enabling busy readers to read as little or as much as they desire Local stations and networks with a set format must take news stories and break them down into the most important aspects due to time constraints Journalists are often expected to aim for objectivity reporters claim to try to cover all sides of an issue without bias as compared to commentators or analysts who provide opinion or personal points of view The resulting articles lay out facts in a sterile noncommittal manner standing back to let the reader decide the truth of the matter 213 Several governments impose certain constraints against bias In the United Kingdom the government agency of Ofcom Office of Communications enforces a legal requirement of impartiality on news broadcasters 214 Both newspapers and broadcast news programs in the United States are generally expected to remain neutral and avoid bias except for clearly indicated editorial articles or segments Many single party governments have operated state run news organizations which may present the government s views Although newswriters have always laid claim to truth and objectivity the modern values of professional journalism were established beginning in the late 1800s and especially after World War I when groups like the American Society of Newspaper Editors codified rules for unbiased news reporting These norms held the most sway in American and British journalism and were scorned by some other countries 215 216 These ideas have become part of the practice of journalism across the world 217 Soviet commentators said stories in the Western press were trivial distractions from reality and emphasized a socialist realism model focusing on developments in everyday life 218 Even in those situations where objectivity is expected it is difficult to achieve and individual journalists may fall foul of their own personal bias or succumb to commercial or political pressure Similarly the objectivity of news organizations owned by conglomerated corporations fairly may be questioned in light of the natural incentive for such groups to report news in a manner intended to advance the conglomerate s financial interests Individuals and organizations who are the subject of news reports may use news management techniques to try to make a favourable impression 219 Because each individual has a particular point of view it is recognized that there can be no absolute objectivity in news reporting 220 Journalists can collectively shift their opinion over what is a controversy up for debate and what is an established fact as evidenced by homogenization during the 2000s of news coverage of climate change 221 Some commentators on news values have argued that journalists training in news values itself represents a systemic bias of the news The norm of objectivity leads journalists to gravitate towards certain types of acts and exclude others A journalist can be sure of objectivity in reporting that an official or public figure has made a certain statement This is one reason why so much news reporting is devoted to official statements 222 This lemma dates back to the early history of public news reporting as exemplified by an English printer who on 12 March 1624 published news from Brussels in the form of letters with the prefacing comment Now because you shall not say that either out of my owne conceit I misliked a phrase or presumptuously tooke upon me to reforme any thing amisse I will truly set you downe their owne words 223 Feminist critiques argue that discourse defined as objective by news organizations reflects a male centered perspective 224 In their selection of sources journalists rely heavily on men as sources of authoritative and objective seeming statements 225 News reporting has also tended to discuss women differently usually in terms of appearance and relationship to men 226 The critique of traditional norms of objectivity comes from within news organizations as well Said Peter Horrocks head of television news at BBC The days of middle of the road balancing Left and Right impartiality are dead we need to consider adopting what I like to think of as a much wider radical impartiality the need to hear the widest range of views all sides of the story 214 Social organization of news production EditNews organizations Edit Viewed from a sociological perspective news for mass consumption is produced in hierarchical organizations Reporters working near the bottom of the structure are given significant autonomy in researching and preparing reports subject to assignments and occasional intervention from higher decision makers 227 Owners at the top of the news hierarchy influence the content of news indirectly but substantially The professional norms of journalism discourage overt censorship however news organizations have covert but firm norms about how to cover certain topics These policies are conveyed to journalists through socialization on the job without any written policy they simply learn how things are done 228 229 Journalists comply with these rules for various reasons including job security 230 Journalists are also systematically influenced by their education including journalism school 231 News production is routinized in several ways News stories use familiar formats and subgenres which vary by topic Rituals of objectivity such as pairing a quotation from one group with a quotation from a competing group dictate the construction of most news narratives Many news items revolve around periodic press conferences or other scheduled events Further routine is established by assigning each journalist to a beat a domain of human affairs usually involving government or commerce in which certain types of events routinely occur 232 A common scholarly frame for understanding news production is to examine the role of information gatekeepers to ask why and how certain narratives make their way from news producers to news consumers 233 Obvious gatekeepers include journalists news agency staff and wire editors of newspapers 234 Ideology personal preferences source of news and length of a story are among the many considerations which influence gatekeepers 235 Although social media have changed the structure of news dissemination gatekeeper effects may continue due to the role of a few central nodes in the social network 236 New factors have emerged in internet era newsrooms One issue is click thinking the editorial selection of news stories and of journalists who can generate the most website hits and thus advertising revenue Unlike a newspaper a news website has detailed data collection about which stories are popular and who is reading them 183 237 The drive for speedy online postings some journalists have acknowledged has altered norms of fact checking so that verification takes place after publication 183 238 Journalists sometimes unattributed echoing of other news sources can also increase the homogeneity of news feeds 239 The digital age can accelerate the problem of circular reporting propagation of the same error through increasingly reliable sources In 2009 a number of journalists were embarrassed after all reproducing a fictional quotation originating from Wikipedia 239 240 News organizations have historically been male dominated though women have acted as journalists since at least the 1880s The number of female journalists has increased over time but organizational hierarchies remain controlled mostly by men 241 Studies of British news organizations estimate that more than 80 of decision makers are men 242 Similar studies have found old boys networks in control of news organizations in the United States and the Netherlands 243 Further newsrooms tend to divide journalists by gender assigning men to hard topics like military crime and economics and women to soft humanised topics 244 Relationship with institutions Edit For various reasons news media usually have a close relationship with the state and often church as well even when they cast themselves in critical roles 48 49 245 This relationship seems to emerge because the press can develop symbiotic relationships with other powerful social institutions 245 In the United States the Associated Press wire service developed a bilateral monopoly with the Western Union telegraph company 119 246 The news agencies which rose to power in the mid 1800s all had support from their respective governments and in turn served their political interests to some degree 139 News for consumption has operated under statist assumptions even when it takes a stance adversarial to some aspect of a government 247 In practice a large proportion of routine news production involves interactions between reporters and government officials 248 Relatedly journalists tend to adopt a hierarchical view of society according to which a few people at the top of organizational pyramids are best situated to comment on the reality which serves as the basisi of news 249 Broadly speaking therefore news tends to normalize and reflect the interests of the power structure dominant in its social context 250 Today international non governmental organizations NGOs rival and may surpass governments in their influence on the content of news 251 State control Edit Main article State media Governments use international news transmissions to promote the national interest and conduct political warfare alternatively known as public diplomacy and in the modern era international broadcasting International radio broadcasting came into wide ranging use by world powers seeking cultural integration of their empires 252 The British government used BBC radio as a diplomatic tool setting up Arabic Spanish and Portuguese services in 1937 253 American propaganda broadcasters include Voice of America and Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty set up during the Cold War and still operating today 254 The United States remains the world s top broadcaster although by some accounts it was surpassed for a time circa 1980 by the Soviet Union Other major international broadcasters include the People s Republic of China Taiwan Germany Saudi Arabia Egypt North Korea India Cuba and Australia 255 Around the world and especially formerly in the Soviet bloc international news sources such as the BBC World Service are often welcomed as alternatives to domestic state run media 256 257 Governments have also funneled programming through private news organizations as when the British government arranged to insert news into the Reuters feed during and after World War Two 258 Past revelations have suggested that the U S military and intelligence agencies create news stories which they disseminate secretly into the foreign and domestic media Investigation into the Central Intelligence Agency pursued in the 1970s found that it owned hundreds of news organizations wire services newspapers magazines outright 259 260 Soviet news warfare also involved the creation of front groups like the International Organization of Journalists The Russian KGB heavily pursued a strategy of disinformation planting false stories which made their way to news outlets worldwide 261 Broadcasts into Iraq before the Second Gulf War mimicked the style of local programming 262 The US also launched Middle East Broadcasting Networks featuring the satellite TV station Alhurra and radio station Radio Sawa to beam 24 hour programming to Iraq and environs 263 Today Al Jazeera a TV and internet news network owned by the government of Qatar has become one of the foremost news sources in the world appreciated by millions as an alternative to the Western media 264 State owned China Central Television operates 18 channels and reaches more than a billion viewers worldwide 265 Iran s Press TV and Russia s Russia Today branded as RT also have multiplatform presences and large audiences Public relations Edit If important things of life to day consist of trans atlantic radiophone talks arranged by commercial telephone companies if they consist of inventions that will be commercially advantageous to the men who market them if they consist of Henry Fords with epoch making cars then all this is news Edward Bernays Propaganda 1928 pp 152 153 As distinct from advertising which deals with marketing distinct from news public relations involves the techniques of influencing news in order to give a certain impression to the public A standard public relations tactic the third party technique is the creation of seemingly independent organizations which can deliver objective sounding statements to news organizations without revealing their corporate connections 266 Public relations agencies can create complete content packages such as Video News Releases which are rebroadcast as news without commentary or detail about their origin 267 Video news releases seem like normal news programming but use subtle product placement and other techniques to influence viewers 268 Public relations releases offer valuable newsworthy information to increasingly overworked journalists on deadline 239 This pre organized news content has been called an information subsidy 269 The journalist relies on appearances of autonomy and even opposition to established interests but the public relations agent seek to conceal their client s influence on the news Thus public relations works its magic in secret 251 270 Public relations can dovetail with state objectives as in the case of the 1990 news story about Iraqi soldiers taking babies out of incubators in Kuwaiti hospitals 271 During the Nigerian Civil War both the federal government and the secessionist Republic of Biafra hired public relations firms which competed to influence public opinion in the West and between them established some of the key narratives employed in news reports about the war 272 Overall the position of the public relations industry has grown stronger while the position of news producers has grown weaker Public relations agents mediate the production of news about all sectors of society 270 News consumption EditOver the centuries commentators on newspapers and society have repeatedly observed widespread human interest in news 4 273 Elite members of a society s political and economic institutions might rely on news as one limited source of information for the masses news represents a relatively exclusive window onto the operations by which a society is managed 274 Regular people in societies with news media often spend a lot of time reading or watching news reports 275 Newspapers became significant aspects of national and literary culture as exemplified by James Joyce s Ulysses which derives from the newspapers of 16 June and thereabouts 1904 and represents the newspaper office itself as a vital part of life in Dublin 276 A 1945 study by sociologist Bernard Berelson found that during the 1945 New York newspaper strike New Yorkers exhibited a virtual addiction to news describing themselves as lost nervous isolated and suffering due to the withdrawal 277 Television news has become still further embedded in everyday life with specific programming anticipated at different times of day 278 Children tend to find the news boring too serious or emotionally disturbing They come to perceive news as characteristic of adulthood and begin watching television news in their teenage years because of the adult status it confers 279 People exhibit various forms of skepticism towards the news Studies of tabloid readers found that many of them gain pleasure from seeing through the obviously fake or poorly constructed stories and get their real news from television 280 Social and cultural cohesion Edit An important feature distinguishing news from private information transfers is the impression that when one reads or hears or watches it one joins a larger public 281 In this regard news serves to unify its receivers under the banner of a culture or a society as well as into the sub demographics of a society targeted by their favorite kind of news 282 News thus plays a role in nation building the construction of a national identity 283 Images connected with news can also become iconic and gain a fixed role in the culture Examples such as Alfred Eisenstaedt s photograph V J Day in Times Square Nick Ut s photograph of Phan Thi Kim Phuc and other children running from a napalm blast in Vietnam Kevin Carter s photograph of a starving child being stalked by a vulture 195 etc With the new interconnectedness of global media the experience of receiving news along with a world audience reinforces the social cohesion effect on a larger scale 284 As a corollary global media culture may erode the uniqueness and cohesion of national cultures 199 Public sphere Edit This collective form experience can be understood to constitute a political realm or public sphere 281 285 In this view the news media constitute a fourth estate which serves to check and balance the operations of government 278 This idea at least as a goal to be sought has re emerged in the era of global communications 286 Today unprecedented opportunities exist for public analysis and discussion of world events 287 According to one interpretation of the CNN effect instantaneous global news coverage can rally public opinion as never before to motivate political action 288 In 1989 local and global communications media enabled instant exposure to and discussion of the Chinese government s actions in Tiananmen Square The news about Tiananmen Square travelled over a fax machine telephone newspaper radio and television and continued to travel even after the government imposed new restrictions on local telecommunications 289 News events Edit As the technological means for disseminating news grew more powerful news became an experience which millions of people could undergo simultaneously Outstanding news experiences can exert a profound influence on millions of people Through its power to effect a shared experience news events can mold the collective memory of a society 290 291 One type of news event the media event is a scripted pageant organized for a mass live broadcast Media events include athletic contests such as the Super Bowl and the Olympics cultural events like awards ceremonies and celebrity funerals and also political events such as coronations debates between electoral candidates and diplomatic ceremonies 292 These events typically unfold according to a common format which simplifies the transmission of news items about them 293 Usually they have the effect of increasing the perceived unity of all parties involved which include the broadcasters and audience 294 Today international events such as a national declaration of independence can be scripted in advance with the major news agencies with staff specially deployed to key locations worldwide in advance of the life news broadcast Public relations companies can participate in these events as well 295 The perception that an ongoing crisis is taking place further increases the significance of live news People rely on the news and constantly seek more of it to learn new information and to seek reassurance amidst feelings of fear and uncertainty 296 Crises can also increase the effect of the news on social cohesion and lead the population of a country to rally behind its current leadership 297 The rise of a global news system goes hand in hand with the advent of terrorism and other sensational acts which have power in proportion to the audience they capture In 1979 the capture of American hostages in Iran dominated months of news coverage in the western media gained the status of a crisis and influenced a presidential election 298 South Africans overwhelmingly describe the end of Apartheid as a source of the country s most important news 299 In the United States news events such as the assassinations of the 1960s of John F Kennedy Martin Luther King Jr and Robert F Kennedy the 1969 moon landing the 1986 Challenger explosion the 1997 death of Princess Diana the intervention of the Supreme Court in the 2000 presidential election and the 2001 September 11 attacks 300 In Jordan people cited numerous memorable news events involving death and war including the death of King Hussein Princess Diana and Yitzhak Rabin Positive news stories found memorable by Jordanians featured political events affecting their lives and families such as the Israeli withdrawal from South Lebanon and the Israel Jordan peace treaty 301 News coverage can also shape collective memory in retrospect A study of Israeli news coverage leading up to the media event of the nation s 60th birthday found that news coverage of events like the Holocaust World War Two and subsequent Israeli wars increased the perceived importance of these events in the minds of citizens 302 News making Edit News making is the act of making the news or doing something that is considered to be newsworthy When discussing the act of news making scholars refer to specific models Five of these models are the Professional Model Mirror Model Organizational Model Political Model and Civic Journalism Model 303 The Professional Model is when skilled peoples put certain events together for a specific audience The reaction of the audience is influential because it can determine the impact that the particular article or newspaper has on the readers 304 The Mirror Model states that news should reflect reality This model aims to focus on particular events and provide accuracy in reporting The Organizational Model is also known as the Bargaining Model 303 It focuses on influencing various news organizations by applying pressures to governmental processes The Political Model outlines that news represents the ideological biases of the people as well as the various pressures of the political environment This model mainly influences journalists and attempts to promote public opinion 304 The Civic Journalism Model is when the press discovers the concerns of the people and uses that to write stories This allows the audience to play an active role in society Models of news making help define what the news is and how it influences readers But it does not necessarily account for the content of print news and online media Stories are selected if they have a strong impact incorporate violence and scandal are familiar and local and if they are timely News Stories with a strong impact can be easily understood by a reader Violence and scandal create an entertaining and attention grabbing story 303 Familiarity makes a story more relatable because the reader knows who is being talked about Proximity can influence a reader more A story that is timely will receive more coverage because it is a current event The process of selecting stories coupled with the models of news making are how the media is effective and impactful in society Psychological effects Edit See also Media influence and Cultivation theory Exposure to constant news coverage of war can lead to stress and anxiety 305 Television coverage of the destruction of the World Trade Center in 2001 which repeated the same footage over and over led to symptoms of trauma experienced across the United States 306 Studies have indicated that children have been traumatized by exposure to television of other frightening events including the Challenger disaster 307 Journalists themselves also experience trauma and guilt 308 Research also suggest that constant representations of violence in the news lead people to overestimate the frequency of its occurrence in the real world thus increasing their level of fear in everyday situations 309 Influence Edit The content and style of news delivery certainly have effects on the general public with the magnitude and precise nature of these effects being tough to determine experimentally 310 In Western societies television viewing has been so ubiquitous that its total effect on psychology and culture leave few alternatives for comparison 311 News is the leading source of knowledge about global affairs for people around the world 312 According to agenda setting theory the general public will identify as its priorities those issues which are highlighted on the news 313 The agenda setting model has been well supported by research which indicate that the public s self reported concerns respond to changes in news coverage rather than changes in the underlying issue itself 314 The less an issue obviously affects people s lives the bigger an influence media agenda setting can have on their opinion of it 315 The agenda setting power becomes even stronger in practice because of the correspondence in news topics promulgated by different media channels 316 Influence of sponsorship EditIt has been acknowledged that sponsorship has historically influenced various news stories 317 318 319 This history gained widespread attention following the release of the film Anchorman 2 317 318 319 One example in recent time is the fact that Facebook has invested heavily in news sources and purchasing time on local news media outlets 320 321 TechCrunch journalist Josh Continue even stated in February 2018 that the company stole the news business and used sponsorship to make many news publishers its ghostwriters 320 In January 2019 founder Mark Zuckerberg announced that he will spend 300 million in local news buys over a three year period 321 322 See also EditToronto School of communication theory Fake newsReferences Edit News Oxford English Dictionary accessed online 5 March 2015 Etymology Spec use of plural of new n after Middle French nouvelles see novel n or classical Latin nova new things in post classical Latin also news from late 13th cent in British sources use as noun of neuter plural of novus new compare classical Latin res nova feminine singular a new development a fresh turn of events Compare later novel n Online Etymology Dictionary Retrieved 7 July 2012 Mrs John Cosgrave Is Dead Founded Finch Junior College Was Institution s President Nearly 50 Years Coined Current Events Phrase New York Herald Tribune 1 November 1949 a b Stephens History of News 1988 p 13 a b Smith The Newspaper An International History 1979 p 7 In the information which the newspaper chose to supply and in the many sources of information which it took over and reorganized it contained a bias towards recency or newness to its readers it offered regularity of publication It had to be filled with whatever was available unable to wait until information of greater clarity or certainty or of wider perspective had accumulated Salmon The Newspaper and the Historian 1923 p 10 Salmon quotes Theophraste Renaudot History is the record of things accomplished A Gazette is the reflection of feelings and rumors of the time which may or may not be true a b Pettegree The Invention of News 2014 p 3 Even as news became more plentiful in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries the problem of establishing the veracity of news reports remained acute The news market and by the sixteenth century it was a real market was humming with conflicting reports some incredible some all too plausible lives fortunes even the fate of kingdoms could depend upon acting on the right information a b Park News as a Form of Knowledge 1940 pp 675 676 News is not history because for one thing among others it deals on the whole with isolated events and does not seek to relate them to one another either in the form of causal or in the form of Teleological sequences Schudson When Deadlines Datelines and History in Reading The News 1986 ed Manoff amp Schudson pp 81 82 Shoemaker amp Cohen News Around the World 2006 pp 13 14 Park News as a Form of Knowledge 1940 p 678 Stephens History of News 1988 p 56 It is axiomatic in journalism that the fastest medium with the largest potential audience will disseminate the bulk of a community s breaking news Today that race is being won by television and radio Consequently daily newspapers are beginning to underplay breaking news about yesterday s events already old news to much of their audience in favor of more analytical perspectives on those events In other words dailies are now moving in the direction toward which weeklies retreated when dailies were introduced Heyd Reading newspapers 2012 pp 35 82 newspapers were defining what news was categorizing and expanding their domain on the fly Indeed Somerville argues that news is not an objective historical concept but one that is defined by the news industry as it creates a commodity sold by publishers to the public Stephens History of News 1988 p 3 The term journalism is used broadly here and elsewhere in the book to refer to more than just the production of printed journals it is the most succinct term we have for the activity of gathering and disseminating news Shoemaker amp Cohen News Around the World 2006 p 7 for the journalist the assessment of newsworthiness is an operationalization based on the aforementioned conditions In other words the practitioner typically constructs a method for fulfilling the daily job requirements He or she rarely has an underlying theoretical understanding of what defining something or someone as newsworthy entails To be sure individual journalists may engage in more abstract musings about their work but the profession as a whole is content to apply these conditions and does not care that the theory behind the application is not widely understood Hall 1981 147 calls news a slippery concept with journalists defining newsworthiness as those things that get into the news media Pettegree The Invention of News 2014 p 6 News fitted ideally into the expanding market for cheap print and it swiftly became an important commodity a b Boyd Barrett amp Rantanen The Globalization of News 1998 p 6 News agency news is considered wholesale resource material something that has to be worked upon smelted reconfigured for conversion into a news report that is suitable for consumption by ordinary readers It has also suited the news agencies to be thus presented they have needed to seem credible to extensive networks of retail clients of many different political and cultural shades and hues They have wanted to avoid controversy to maintain an image of plain almost dull but completely dependable professionalism a b c d Phil MacGregor International News Agencies Global eyes that never blink in Fowler Watt amp Allan eds Journalism 2013 Heyd Reading newspapers 2012 pp 36 37 Schudson Discovering the News 1978 p 6 Before the 1920s journalists did not think much about the subjectivity of perception They had relatively little incentive to doubt the firmness of the reality by which they lived After World War I however this changed Journalists like others lost faith in the democratic market society had taken for granted Their experience of propaganda during the war and public relations thereafter convinced them that the world they reported was one that interested parties had constructed for them to report In such a world naive empiricism could not last Allan News Culture 2004 pp 46 47 Stephens History of News 1988 p 2 Sensationalism appears to be a technique or style that is rooted somehow in the nature of the news News obviously can do much more than merely sensationalize but most news is in an important sense sensational it is intended in part to arouse to excite often whether the subject is a political scandal or a double murder to shock a b Stromback Jesper Karlsson Michael Hopmann Nicolas 2012 Determinants of News Content Comparing journalists perceptions of the normative and actual impact of different event properties when deciding what s news Journalism Studies 13 5 6 doi 10 1080 1461670X 2012 664321 S2CID 55642544 Stephens History of News 1988 pp 26 105 106 Allan News Culture 2004 p 202 definition of newsworthiness by the Free Online Dictionary Thesaurus and Encyclopedia Thefreedictionary com Retrieved 9 March 2012 Stephens History of News 1988 p 33 Stephens History of News 1988 p 31 Stephens History of News 1988 pp 14 305 The desire to pass on tales of current events could be found even in Cultures that did not have writing let alone printing presses or computers to whet or satisfy their thirst for news Observers have often remarked on the fierce concern with the news that they find in preliterate or semiliterate peoples It is difficult if not impossible to find a society that does not exchange news and that does not build into its rituals and customs means for facilitating that exchange Stephens History of News 1988 p 23 Fang History of Mass Communication 1997 p 19 Stephens History of News 1988 p 8 A particularly lively forum for the exchange of news by word of mouth the coffeehouse flourished in England well after the development of the newspaper and in some countries the Coffeehouse has survived even the introduction of television Ayalon The Press in the Arab Middle East A History 1995 p 5 Lim Take Writing 2006 pp 1 6 1 Archived 19 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine Bleumer Gerrit 2007 Electronic Postage Systems Technology Security Economics p 2 ISBN 9780387446066 a b Allan News Culture 2004 p 9 Straubhaar and LaRose Communications Media in the Information Society 1997 p 390 Lim Take Writing 2006 p 5 Stephens History of News 1988 p 27 30 Milner Fanno bandire 2013 pp 110 112 Milner Fanno bandire 2013 p 120 Milner Fanno bandire 2013 p 121 Milner Fanno bandire 2013 pp 122 123 Milner Fanno bandire 2013 p 124 Straubhaar and LaRose Communications Media in the Information Society 1997 p 366 Another ancient form of advertising was the town crier who told the citizenry about the good deal to be found just around the corner Unlike the signs which contained only information regarding the merchant the criers also informed the citizens of the news of the day Because the crier or his agent was compensated for his assistance in getting the advertising message out in the context of the news there are interesting parallels with the newspaper of today Applegate 1993 Roche 1993 Schramm 1988 Ayalon The Press in the Arab Middle East A History 1995 p 4 a b Fang History of Mass Communication 1997 pp 14 15 a b Stephens History of News 1988 p 27 Whoever controlled the messengers could select which anecdotes and information would be favored by this treatment Therefore whoever controlled the messengers gained not only a conduit to the members of a society the ability to inform them of new regulations but gained a measure of power over the selection of news the members of a society received the power for example to ensure that they received news of triumphs but not necessarily of debacles Messengers were controlled for the most part by kings chiefs headmen They were rarely channels of dissent Kessler Royal Roads 1995 p 129 The ability of the Assyrian court to challenge a huge and permanent stream of information seems to have been one of the essential factors for the long maintenance of Assyrian domination over the vast areas in the Near East Pettegree The Invention of News 2014 pp 19 20 Stephens History of News 1988 pp 24 25 a b Bakker Trading Facts 2011 p 13 Starr Creation of the Media 2004 pp 156 157 a b c Distelrath Development of the Information and Communication Systems in Germany and Japan 2000 pp 45 46 Zhang Origins of the Modern Chinese Press 2007 p 13 Smith The Newspaper An International History 1979 p 14 The Chinese civilization was one of the earliest to have found it convenient to set up a systematic news collection network across a large land mass During the Han dynasty 206BC AD219 the imperial court arranged to be supplied with information on the events of the Empire by means of a postal empire similar to the princely message systems of the European Middle Ages when the postmasters of the Holy Roman Empire were required to write summaries of events taking place within their regions and transmit them along specified routes a b Smith The Newspaper An International History 1979 p 14 15 Zhang Origins of the Modern Chinese Press 2007 p 14 However it was in the Tang dynasty that a specific bureau the Bureau of Official Reports Jin Zhouyuan was created to accommodate the local representatives During this time there were many rising powerful dukes princes or governor generals in charge of the large territories equal in size to a modern province in China These dukes or princes would naturally provide for their own news service at the capital Chang an which handled all official documents submitted by these representatives and transmitted imperial edicts in return Recent archaeological research has uncovered such official reports from the Tang dynasty Two archive documents of that period originally found in Dunhuang have been regarded by Chinese scholars as the earliest forms of newspaper in the world Fang 1997 53 8 Smith The Newspaper An International History 1979 p 14 At a later stage of its development during the Sung period 960 1278 the ti pao was made to circulate among the purely intellectual groups and during the Ming 1367 1644 was seen by a wider circle of society Brook Timothy 1998 The Confusions of Pleasure Commerce and Culture in Ming China Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 0 520 22154 0 p xxi Stephens History of News 1988 pp 68 69 Alice Gordenker Postal Symbol Japan Times 21 May 2013 Distelrath Development of the Information and Communication Systems in Germany and Japan 2000 p 44 Lampe amp Ploeckl Spanning the Globe 2014 247 McCusker amp Gravesteijn Beginnings of Commercial and Financial Journalism 1991 p 21 Business thrives on the most recent news The merchants of the sixteenth seventeenth and eighteenth centuries no less than those of today required the freshest advices in order to conduct their affairs profitably Wan Press org Archived 11 January 2012 at the Wayback Machine A Newspaper Timeline World Association of Newspapers Infelise Mario Roman Avvisi Information and Politics in the Seventeenth Century in Court and Politics in Papal Rome 1492 1700 Cambridge University Press 2002 pp 212 214 216 217 Selfridge Field Eleanor Pallade Veneta Writings on Music and Society 1650 1750 Venice Fondazione Ugo e Olga Levi 1985 Chs 1 2 3 Selfridge Field Eleanor Song and Season Science Culture and Theatrical Time Stanford UP 2007 Chs 10 11 Pettegree The Invention of News 2014 p 5 a b c Lampe amp Ploeckl Spanning the Globe 2014 248 Pettegree The Invention of News 2014 pp 17 18 Starr Creation of the Media 2004 pp 30 31 Fang History of Mass Communication 1997 pp 29 30 Smith The Newspaper An International History 1979 pp 18 19 Since the late Middle Ages a formal network of correspondents and intelligence agents had come into being across the bulk of the European continent busily sending news of military diplomatic and ecclesiastical affairs along a series of prescribed routes The information was handwritten and passed along carefully organized chains each item being labeled with its place and date of origin a b Bakker Trading Facts 2011 pp 11 12 Lim Take Writing 2006 pp 35 45 a b Bakker Trading Facts 2011 pp 10 11 Kallionen Information communication technology and business 2004 p 22 Kallionen Information communication technology and business 2004 p 21 Although the businessmen obtained information from newspapers and other public sources for instance from the consuls stationed in foreign towns they placed special value on the letters received directly from their foreign partners This is precisely the key to the existence of a network relationship the parties were dependent on the resources controlled by both parties both goods and information so by mutual co operation both parties gained mutual benefits Long term personal networks were particularly well suited for transmitting information that required high reliability Fang History of Mass Communication 1997 pp 20 23 Pettegree The Invention of News 2014 pp 6 8 So this sort of news reporting was very different from the discreet dispassionate services of the manuscript news men News pamphlets were often committed and engaged intended to persuade as well as inform News also became for the first time part of the entertainment industry What could be more entertaining than the tale of some catastrophe in a far off place or a grisly murder This was not unproblematic particularly for the traditional leaders of society who were used to news being part of a confidential service provided by trusted agents Pettegree The Invention of News 2014 p 8 Weber 2006 p 396harvnb error no target CITEREFWeber2006 help World Association of Newspapers Newspapers 400 Years Young Archived 10 March 2010 at the Wayback Machine Pettegree The Invention of News 2014 p 9 The news reporting of the newspapers was very different and utterly unfamiliar to those who had not previously been subscribers to the manuscript service Each report was no more than a couple sentences long It offered no explanation comment or commentary Unlike a news pamphlet the reader did not know where this fitted in the narrative or even whether what was reported would turn out to be important Smith The Newspaper An International History 1979 pp 9 10 Cranfield Press and Society 1978 p 1 Heyd Reading newspapers 2012 p 11 Heyd Reading newspapers 2012 pp 15 16 Starr Creation of the Media 2004 p 29 Starr Creation of the Media 2004 pp 43 44 Bakker Trading Facts 2011 p 30 Starr Creation of the Media 2004 pp 69 73 Starr Creation of the Media 2004 p 90 The 1792 law codified the right of newspapers to exchange copies for free with one another and by the 1840s the average newspaper received an astonishing 4 300 exchange copies a year Editors relied on other papers for the national news that filled most of their columns In effect the federal government was encouraging local papers to become outlets for a national news network that the government itself did not control Cloud Frontier Press 2008 pp 8 9 22 23 Cloud Frontier Press 2008 pp 31 73 Cloud Frontier Press 2008 pp 67 69 Starr Creation of the Media 2004 p 48 Tout est primitif et sauvage autour de lui mais lui est pour ainsi dire le resultat de dix huit siecles de travaux et d experience Il porte le vetement des villes en parle la langue sait le passe est curieux de l avenir argumente sur le present c est un homme tres civilise qui pour un temps se soumet a vivre au milieu des bois et qui s enfonce dans les deserts du Nouveau Monde avec la Bible une hache et des journaux Smith The Newspaper An International History 1979 pp 88 89 Straubhaar and LaRose Communications Media in the Information Society 1997 p 391 Parsons Power of the Financial Press 1989 p 31 Parsons Power of the Financial Press 1989 p 40 Parsons Power of the Financial Press 1989 pp 81 110 Fosu The Press and Political Participation 2014 p 59 a b c Fosu The Press and Political Participation 2014 pp 60 61 Fosu The Press and Political Participation 2014 p 62 Fosu The Press and Political Participation 2014 pp 64 65 Ayalon The Press in the Arab Middle East A History 1995 pp 6 7 Ayalon The Press in the Arab Middle East A History 1995 pp 13 16 Ayalon The Press in the Arab Middle East A History 1995 pp 28 39 Wenzlhuemer Connecting the Nineteenth Century World 2013 pp 31 32 Bakker Trading Facts 2011 p 15 Starr Creation of the Media 2004 p 180 Salmon The Newspaper and the Historian 1923 p 118 Salmon The Newspaper and the Historian 1923 pp 117 118 a b Wenzlhuemer Connecting the Nineteenth Century World 2013 pp 90 92 Hachten World News Prism 1996 p 43 a b Starr Creation of the Media 2004 pp 175 177 Bakker Trading Facts 2011 p 16 a b Allan News Culture 2004 p 17 Headrick Daniel R Griset Pascal Submarine Telegraph Cables Business and Politics 1838 1939 Business History Review 75 3 Graham Meikle Interpreting News Palgrave Macmillan 2009 p 152 Hills Struggle for Control of Global Communication 2002 p 32 Wenzlhuemer Connecting the Nineteenth Century World 2013 pp 211 215 Hills Struggle for Control of Global Communication 2002 pp 145 146 Hills Struggle for Control of Global Communication 2002 pp 153 178 Oliver Boyd Barrett Global News Agencies in Boyd Barrett amp Rantanen The Globalization of News 1998 pp 26 27 The principal feature of the world s news market in the second half of the 19th century and the first third of the 20th was the cartel This was an oligopolistic and hierarchical structure of the global news market controlled by Reuters Havas and Wolff at the top tier in partnership with an ever increasing number of national news agencies Each member of the triumvirate had the right to distribute its news service incorporating news of the cartel to its ascribed territories these territories were determined by periodic formal agreements The triumvirate of Reuters Havas and Wolff supplied world news to national news agencies in return for a service of national news although the practice was rather more complicated the national agencies had exclusive rights to the distribution of cartel news in their territories and the cartel had exclusive rights to the national agency news services Bakker Trading Facts 2011 p 22 Bakker Trading Facts 2011 p 36 Bakker Trading Facts 2011 p 23 Bakker Trading Facts 2011 p 28 Michael Palmer What Makes News in Boyd Barrett amp Rantanen The Globalization of News 1998 pp 180 181 a b Michael Palmer What Makes News in Boyd Barrett amp Rantanen The Globalization of News 1998 p 184 a b c Xin Xin A developing market in news Xinhua News Agency and Chinese newspapers Media Culture amp Society 28 1 2006 Michael Palmer What Makes News in Boyd Barrett amp Rantanen The Globalization of News 1998 pp 182 183 Allan News Culture 2004 pp 18 19 Wolfe Governing Soviet Journalism 2005 pp 25 26 Translating Lenin Why instead of 200 400 lines you can t write in 20 10 lines about such simple well known clear and already mastered to a great degree widespread phenomena like the base betrayals of the Mensheviks those lackeys of the bourgeoisie like the Anglo Japanese invasion for the restoration of the holy law of capital like the chattering teeth of the American millionaires against Germany and so on and so on It is necessary to talk about this it is necessary to register each new fact in this regard but in a few lines to pound out in telegraph style the new appearances of old already known and evaluated policies a b Boyd Barrett Global News Agencies in Boyd Barrett amp Rantanen The Globalization of News 1998 pp 23 24 Earnings were generally derived from the sale of news services to media financial or economic institutions and governments which were important as sources of revenue and as sources of intelligence and it is generally considered that their news services reflected their respective national interests Bakker Trading Facts 2011 p 33 a b Allan News Culture 2004 pp 26 27 Wood History of International Broadcasting 1992 p 31 It was quite normal for the average listener to be depicted as dressed immaculately in full evening dress seated or standing elegantly with an expensive brand of cigarette in his hand listening to his set The BBC was happy to live up to this stereotype Radio announces always arrived in evening dress and announcers were chosen from the upper classes of English society More importantly they had to be able to speak the King s English just as the King spoke it Wood History of International Broadcasting 1992 pp 33 34 Straubhaar and LaRose Communications Media in the Information Society 1997 pp 177 178 Allan News Culture 2004 p 33 a b Allan News Culture 2004 p 34 Wood History of International Broadcasting 1992 p 27 Thus WEAF planted the seeds of a new business that eventually grew to envelop the broadcasting industry advertising public relations and propaganda From about 1927 this revolution was under way Advertising agencies manufacturers sponsors promoters and the sellers of medical and life insurance were jockeying for places in a world of propaganda disseminated by radio broadcasting Wood History of International Broadcasting 1992 pp 38 42 Allan News Culture 2004 p 29 Wood History of International Broadcasting 1992 p 51 Wood History of International Broadcasting 1992 pp 45 Wood History of International Broadcasting 1992 pp 87 91 Wood History of International Broadcasting 1992 pp 39 105 Wood History of International Broadcasting 1992 pp 108 114 132 Allan News Culture 2004 p 42 44 Straubhaar and LaRose Communications Media in the Information Society 1997 p 209 Straubhaar and LaRose Communications Media in the Information Society 1997 pp 179 210 a b McNair Cultural Chaos 2006 pp 108 114 Hachten World News Prism 1996 p 34 a b Hachten World News Prism 1996 pp 45 48 When a major crisis breaks out overseas ABC CBS and NBC will issue news bulletins and then go back to scheduled programming and perhaps do a late evening wrap up but CNN stays on the air for long stretches of time continually updating the story The networks version of the story will be seen in the United States CNN s version will be seen all over the world Hachten World News Prism 1996 pp 54 55 a b John Tomlinson Cultural Globalization and Cultural Imperialism in Mohammadi ed International Communication and Globalization 1997 McNair Cultural Chaos 2006 p 118 Allan News Culture 2004 p 173 a b c d e Shelley Thompson The Future of Newspapers in a Digital Age in Fowler Watt amp Allan eds Journalism 2013 Shane Richmond Telegraph co uk 15 years of online news The Telegraph 11 November 2009 a b c Allan News Culture 2004 pp 175 176 McNair Cultural Chaos 2006 pp 1 2 Hachten World News Prism 1996 p 8 a b Silverblatt amp Zlobin International Communications 2004 pp 42 43 In contrast the Masai a nomadic community of cattle raisers in Kenya Africa spend their lives on the move consequently their contact with the media is sporadic As a result members of the Masai community did not learn about the September 11 attack in New York until the following June Straubhaar and LaRose Communications Media in the Information Society 1997 pp 158 159 Straubhaar and LaRose Communications Media in the Information Society 1997 pp 163 164 Allan News Culture 2004 p 100 a b c Hachten World News Prism 1996 pp 39 41 McNair Cultural Chaos 2006 pp 124 133 Einar Thorsen Live Blogging and Social Media Curation Challenges and Opportunities for Journalism in Fowler Watt amp Allan eds Journalism 2013 Caitlin Patrick amp Stuart Allan The Camera as Witness The Changing Nature of Photojournalism in Fowler Watt amp Allan eds Journalism 2013 a b Schudson Michael 2011 The Sociology of News 2nd ed p 205 ISBN 978 0 393 91287 6 Schudson Michael 2011 The Sociology of News 2nd ed pp 207 216 Schudson Michael 2011 The Sociology of News 2nd ed p 207 a b c Watanabe Kohei 2013 The western perspective in Yahoo News and Google News Quantitative analysis of geographic coverage of online news International Communication Gazette 75 2 141 156 doi 10 1177 1748048512465546 S2CID 143123659 Chris Paterson News Agency Dominance in International news on the Internet Papers in International and Global Communication 01 06 Center for International Communications Research May 2006 a b c Johnston Jane Forde Susan 2011 The Silent Partner News Agencies and 21st Century News International Journal of Communication 5 Broderick James F Darren W Miller 2007 Consider the source A Critical Guide to 100 Prominent News and Information Sites on the Web Information Today Inc p 1 ISBN 978 0 910965 77 4 Boyd Barrett amp Rantanen The Globalization of News 1998 p 2 Oliver Boyd Barrett Global News Agencies in Boyd Barrett amp Rantanen The Globalization of News 1998 p 28 a b Oliver Boyd Barrett Global News Agencies in Boyd Barrett amp Rantanen The Globalization of News 1998 p 21 Bloomberg s influence is greater than the number of its terminals may suggest as it feeds financial data and economic news through the AP network to AP members and clients in the United States and to many national networks through national news agencies Indeed it boasts having the second largest wholesale news distribution in the United States after AP It has print radio and television distribution in many countries Bloomberg television is distributed via Astra satellite service in Europe a b John Bartram Ewha News Agency Wars the battle between Reuters and Bloomberg Journalism Studies 4 3 2003 Hong Junhao 2011 From the World s Largest Propaganda Machine to a Multipurposed Global News Agency Factors in and Implications of Xinhua s Transformation Since 1978 Political Communication 28 3 377 393 doi 10 1080 10584609 2011 572487 S2CID 143208781 Hachten World News Prism 1996 p 38 Lisa M George amp Christiaan Hogendorn Local News Online Aggregators Geo Targeting and the Market for Local News 1 November 2013 Boyd Barrett amp Rantanen The Globalization of News 1998 p 9 Oliver Boyd Barrett Global News Agencies in Boyd Barrett amp Rantanen The Globalization of News 1998 p 19 Hachten World News Prism 1996 p 7 Since World War II an intricate and worldwide network of international news media has evolved providing an expanded capability for information flows This relationship between the capacity and the need to communicate rapidly has resulted from the interaction of two long term historical processes the evolution toward a single global society and the movement of civilization beyond four great benchmarks of human communication speech writing printing electronic communications telephone and radio into a fifth era of long distance instant communication based on telecommunications mainly satellites and computer technology Harold Lasswell believed that the mass media revolution has accelerated the tempo and direction of world history What would have happened later has happened sooner and changes in timing may have modified substantive developments Oliver Boyd Barrett Global News Agencies in Boyd Barrett amp Rantanen The Globalization of News 1998 p 22 a b Barbie Zeiler Cannibalizing Memory in the Global Flow of News in On Media Memory 2011 ed Neiger Myers amp Zandberg pp 31 34 Fosu The Press and Political Participation 2014 pp 67 73 Straubhaar and LaRose Communications Media in the Information Society 1997 pp 124 125 Hachten World News Prism 1996 pp 100 102 a b c Silverblatt amp Zlobin International Communications 2004 pp 28 31 A major liability of transnational media conglomerates is the loss of distinctive local culture Transnational media conglomerates have a distinctly American influence regardless of their country of origin For instance although Bertlesmann is a German based corporation in 2001 its largest proportion of its revenue 35 per cent came from its U S media subsidiaries including Bantam Doubleday Dell and Random House publishing companies Family Circle and McCall s magazines and Arista and RCA record labels McNair Cultural Chaos 2006 pp 105 108 Boyd Barrett amp Rantanen The Globalization of News 1998 p 8 10 The UN through UNESCO consistently endeavored to encourage the spread and development of national news agencies and of news exchange arrangements between them especially during the great wave of independence in Africa during the 1960s Setting up a national news agency became one of the essential things part of the script of what it meant to be a nation Through a national news agency a state could lay down information links domestically and internationally which would facilitate the generation and exchange of news Chakravartty and Sarikakis Media Policy and Globalization 2006 p 31 C Anthony Giffard Alternative News Agencies in Boyd Barrett amp Rantanen The Globalization of News 1998 p 191 a b C Anthony Giffard Alternative News Agencies in Boyd Barrett amp Rantanen The Globalization of News 1998 pp 192 194 C Anthony Giffard Alternative News Agencies in Boyd Barrett amp Rantanen The Globalization of News 1998 pp 195 196 C Anthony Giffard Alternative News Agencies in Boyd Barrett amp Rantanen The Globalization of News 1998 pp 196 197 Chakravartty and Sarikakis Media Policy and Globalization 2006 p 29 Chakravartty and Sarikakis Media Policy and Globalization 2006 pp 33 38 Chakravartty and Sarikakis Media Policy and Globalization 2006 pp 58 72 133 136 In almost all cases a combination of privatization schemes and higher rates of public investment led to double digit growth in teledensity figures throughout the 1990s and continuing today see Table 3 3 Private telecommunications operators were drawn to emerging markets like Brazil China and India among others because technological innovation coupled with policy reforms promised access to lucrative high density business and urban middle class consumers The few comparative studies of telecommunications reform in the South show that the political environment whether the state is responsive to democratic public interest and its relative power vis a vis foreign capital and G8 nations have shaped the terms of reform Ali Mohammadi Communication and the Globalizing Process in the Developing World in Mohammadi ed International Communication and Globalization 1997 Geniets Global News Challenge 2013 pp 22 27 Chakravartty and Sarikakis Media Policy and Globalization 2006 pp 136 143 Public Journalism and the Problem of Objectivity Unc edu Retrieved 9 March 2012 a b Sue Wallace Impartiality in the News in Fowler Watt amp Allan eds Journalism 2013 Allan News Culture 2004 pp 20 23 Matheson Donald 2000 The birth of news discourse changes in news language in British newspapers 1880 1930 Media Culture amp Society 22 5 557 573 doi 10 1177 016344300022005002 S2CID 145467409 Zhong Searching for Meaning 2006 pp 15 35 Wolfe Governing Soviet Journalism 2005 p 29 Thomas Helen 2006 Spinning the News Watchdogs of Democracy The Waning Washington Press Corps and How It Has Failed the Public Simon and Schuster p 57 ISBN 978 1 4165 4861 4 Re thinking Objectivity CJR Retrieved 9 March 2012 Sara Shipley Hiles amp Amanda Hinnart Climate Change in the Newsroom Journalists Evolving Standards of Objectivity When Covering Global Warming Science Communication 36 4 2014 John Soloski News Reporting and Professionalism Some Constraints on Reporting the News from Media Culture amp Society 11 1989 reprinted in Berkowitz Social Meanings of News 1997 pp 143 145 Cranfield Press and Society 1978 p 8 Allan News Culture 2004 p 123 Allan News Culture 2004 p 129 Allan News Culture 2004 pp 134 135 James S Ettema D Charles Whitney amp Daniel B Wackman in Handbook of Communications Science 1987 ed C H Berger amp S H Chaffee reprinted in Berkowitz Social Meanings of News 1997 p 37 Warren Breed Social Control in the Newsroom A Functional Analysis pdf from Social Forces 33 1955 reprinted in Berkowitz Social Meanings of News 1997 pp 108 110 John Soloski News Reporting and Professionalism Some Constraints on Reporting the News from Media Culture amp Society 11 1989 reprinted in Berkowitz Social Meanings of News 1997 pp 139 140 146 152 One method management could use to control its journalists would be to establish rules and regulations This bureaucratic form would not be very efficient A more efficient method for controlling behavior in nonbureaucratic organizations such as news organizations is through professionalism Professionalism makes the use of discretion predictable It relieves bureaucratic organizations of responsibility for devising their own mechanisms of control in the discretionary areas of work Larson 1977 168 emphasis in original Warren Breed Social Control in the Newsroom A Functional Analysis pdf from Social Forces 33 1955 reprinted in Berkowitz Social Meanings of News 1997 pp 111 114 John Soloski News Reporting and Professionalism Some Constraints on Reporting the News from Media Culture amp Society 11 1989 reprinted in Berkowitz Social Meanings of News 1997 pp 141 142 James S Ettema D Charles Whitney amp Daniel B Wackman in Handbook of Communications Science 1987 ed C H Berger amp S H Chaffee reprinted in Berkowitz Social Meanings of News 1997 p 38 Pamela J Shoemaker A New Gatekeeping Model from Gatekeeping 1991 reprinted in Berkowitz Social Meanings of News 1997 p 57 Simply put gatekeeping is the process by which the billions of messages that are available in the world get cut down and transformed into hundreds of messages that reach a given person on a given day David Manning White The Gate Keeper A Case Study in the Selection of News from Journalism Quarterly 27 1950 reprinted in Berkowitz Social Meanings of News 1997 p 63 David Manning White The Gate Keeper A Case Study in the Selection of News from Journalism Quarterly 27 1950 reprinted in Berkowitz Social Meanings of News 1997 pp 66 71 Thomas John Erneste Toward a Networked Gatekeeping Theory Journalism News Diffusion and Democracy in a Networked Model Dissertation accepted at University of Minnesota January 2014 An Nguyen Online News Audiences The challenges of web metrics in Fowler Watt amp Allan eds Journalism 2013 Joanna Redden The Mediation of Poverty The News New Media and Politics Dissertation accepted at Goldsmiths University of London 2011 a b c Jamie Matthews Journalists and their sources The twin challenges of diversity and verification in Fowler Watt amp Allan eds Journalism 2013 John Timmer Wikipedia hoax points to limits of journalists research A sociology student placed a fake quote on Wikipedia only to see it show up Ars Technica 7 May 2009 Allan News Culture 2004 pp 119 121 Allan News Culture 2004 p 124 Allan News Culture 2004 pp 127 129 Allan News Culture 2004 pp 129 130 a b Salmon The Newspaper and the Historian 1923 pp 90 91 Annteresa Lubrano The Telegraph How Technology Innovation Caused Social Change New York Garland 1997 pp 72 74 Stephens History of News 1988 p 5 Free of an extended view of the history of press government relations it is easy to maintain a romantic image of the journalist when unchained by repressive regulation as a staunch adversary of government it is easy to overlook the basic pro authoritarian role that has been played by those who spread news their success in occupying the minds of the governed with a belief in the importance if not the inevitabiltiy of a system of government Michael Schudson The Sociology of News Production from Media Culture amp Society 1989 reprinted in Berkowitz Social Meanings of News 1997 p 14 One study after another comes up with essentially the same observation and it matters not whether the study is at the national state or local level the story of journalism on a day to day basis is the story of the interaction of reporters and officials Allan News Culture 2004 pp 62 63 To clarify H S Becker 1967 employs the notion of a hierarchy of credibility to specify how in a system of ranked groups participants will take it as given that the members of the highest group are best placed to define the way things really are due to their knowledge of truth Implicit in this assumption is the view that those at the top will have access to a more complete picture of the bureaucratic organization s workings than members of lower groups whose definition of reality because of this subordinate status can only be partial and distorted James S Ettema D Charles Whitney amp Daniel B Wackman in Handbook of Communications Science 1987 ed C H Berger amp S H Chaffee reprinted in Berkowitz Social Meanings of News 1997 pp 34 37 In sum a considerable body of research supports the argument that inter organizational and institutional level forces realized in a journalistic culture of objectivity fostered by and in the service of progressive liberal capitalism constrain what journalists report News thus exhibits an identifiable and widely shared form and a content broadly consonant with the social structures and values of its political economic context a b Van Leuven Sarah Joye Stijn 2013 Civil Society Organizations at the Gates A Gatekeeping Study of News Making Efforts by NGOs and Government Institutions International Journal of Press Politics 19 2 Geniets Global News Challenge 2013 pp 4 6 15 Wood History of International Broadcasting 1992 p 39 Wood History of International Broadcasting 1992 pp 177 182 Wood History of International Broadcasting 1992 pp 129 133 132 206 207 Geniets Global News Challenge 2013 p 47 Hachten World News Prism 1996 pp 66 67 Wood History of International Broadcasting 1992 pp 21 55 The Reuters news service would be broadcast from Rugby with an insertion written by the Foreign Office The secret agreement provided that both Leafield and Rugby Radio would carry 720 000 words per year at a cost of three and a half pence per word During and after the Second World War these two radio stations transmitted news whose content had been falsified with the intention of deceiving the enemy Parenti Inventing Reality 1993 pp 66 68 Hachten World News Prism 1996 pp 116 118 Hachten World News Prism 1996 pp 113 116 Silverblatt amp Zlobin International Communications 2004 p 49 also see Silverblatt amp Zlobin International Communications 2004 p 49 also see Josh Getlin and Johanna Neuman Vying for Eyes Ears of Iraq Los Angeles Times 10 May 2003 Geniets Global News Challenge 2013 p 8 Geniets Global News Challenge 2013 p 66 Rampton amp Stauber Trust Us We re Experts 2001 pp 13 20 Rampton amp Stauber Trust Us We re Experts 2001 pp 22 24 Straubhaar and LaRose Communications Media in the Information Society 1997 pp 395 396 Curtin Patricia A 1999 Reevaluating Public Relations Information Subsidies Market Driven Journalism and Agenda Building Theory and Practice Journal of Public Relations Research 11 1 53 90 doi 10 1207 s1532754xjprr1101 03 a b Kevin Moloney Daniel Jackson amp David McQueen News journalism and public relations a dangerous relationship in Fowler Watt amp Allan eds Journalism 2013 Parenti Inventing Reality 1993 p 169 Karen Rothmyer What really happened in Biafra Why did themes such as mass starvation and genocide alternately surface and fade A study of media susceptibility to public relations manipulation Columbia Journalism Review 9 3 Fall 1970 Salmon The Newspaper and the Historian 1923 pp 1 2 31 Perse Media Effects And Society 2001 pp 93 94 Because political events and issues in modern societies typically take place in specialized locations most citizens experience politics vicariously For elites information from the media becomes just one of many sources of data Because of their political involvement and interest and their vast base of prior knowledge elites treat media coverage as foreground or sources of new and or specific information Nonelites on the other hand are not so interested in politics and they have relatively little prior knowledge about political issues For nonelites media coverage is not only a source of new data but their only source of information Stephens History of News 1988 p 5 R Brandon Kershner The Culture of Joyce s Ulysses Palgrave Macmillan 2010 see Chapter Five Newspapers and Periodicals Endless Dialogue Also see James Broderick Give Us This Day Our Daily Press Journalism in the Life and Art of James Joyce Dissertation accepted at City University of New York 1999 Bernard Berelson What missing the newspaper means in Communications Research 1948 1949 ed Lazarsfeld amp Stanton New York Harper amp Brothers 1949 quoted in Stephens History of News 1988 p 17 a b Allan News Culture 2004 pp 47 48 Allan News Culture 2004 pp 113 115 Allan News Culture 2004 pp 110 112 a b Starr Creation of the Media 2004 p 24 Publications weave invisible threads of connection among their readers Once a newspaper circulates for example no one ever truly reads it alone Readers know that others are also seeing it at roughly the same time and they read it differently as a result conscious that the information is now out in the open spread before a public that may talk about the news and act on it Salmon The Newspaper and the Historian 1923 p 17 The newspaper has ceased to be a personal organ and has become a social product it no longer represents the interests of an individual but it represents rather a group activity The press groups society and unifies each group as Scott James has pointed out It unifies society on national lines and thus the press of each country has developed in its own characteristic direction It unifies the groups interested in religion in politics in business in automobiles in sports in education or in fashion and from these groups having unified interests there has developed the press that ministers to each specialized group Motti Neiger Eyal Zandberg and Oren Meyers Localizing Collective Memory Radio Broadcasts and the Construction of Regional Memory in On Media Memory 2011 ed Neiger Myers amp Zandberg pp 156 160 In Israel radio played a decisive role in establishing and consolidating the nation during the first decades after the creation of the State Pansler 2004 The exclusive position enjoyed by radio in the field of electronic broadcasting during the crucial first twenty years of Israel s existence since 1948 when the press was politically divided and television was absent Israel s first television channel started broadcasting in 1968 gave it much weight in setting the collective agenda McNair Cultural Chaos 2006 pp 6 7 But news is an illusion which when we receive it and when we extend to it our trust in its authority as a representation of the real transports us from the relative isolation of our domestic environments the parochialism of our streets and small towns the crowded bustle of our big cities to membership of virtual global communities united in access to these events communally experienced at this moment through global communications networks It is indeed more like the fear and exhilaration experienced by watching a movie on the big screen but with an added viscerality contributed by the awareness that this scene unlike a movie is really happening right now to real people Park News as a Form of Knowledge 1940 p 677 Geniets Global News Challenge 2013 pp 17 18 McNair Cultural Chaos 2006 pp 140 144 McNair Cultural Chaos 2006 pp 179 185 Hachten World News Prism 1996 pp 70 72 Salmon The Newspaper and the Historian 1923 pp 211 213 Park News as a Form of Knowledge 1940 pp 685 686 In fact the multiplication of the means of communication has brought it about that anyone even in the most distant part of the world may now actually participate in events at least as listener if not as spectator as they actually take place in some other part of the world We have recently listened to Mussolini address his fascist followers from a balcony of Rome we have heard Hitler speaking over the heads of a devout congregation in the Reichstag in Berlin not merely to the President but to the people of the United States We have even had an opportunity to hear the terms of the momentous Munich agreement ten seconds after it had been signed by the representatives of four of the leading powers in Europe and the world The fact that acts so momentous as these can be so quickly and so publicly consummated has suddenly and completely changed the character of international politics so that one can no longer even guess what the future has in store for Europe and for the world Dayan amp Katz Media Events 1992 pp 1 14 Dayan amp Katz Media Events 1992 pp 25 53 Dayan amp Katz Media Events 1992 p 196 Paterson Chris Andresen Kenneth Hoxha Abit 2011 The manufacture of an international news event The day Kosovo was born Journalism 13 1 103 120 doi 10 1177 1464884911400846 S2CID 145715955 Perse Media Effects And Society 2001 57 61 Perse Media Effects And Society 2001 73 76 Hachten World News Prism 1996 pp 73 77 Danie Du Plessis What s News in South Africa in Shoemaker amp Cohen News Around the World 2006 p 303 Virtually all references to the political significance of news events refer to the historical events of the first part of the 1990s Current political events are overshadowed so greatly by the start of the political process in South Africa that they have lost much of their significance to the participants Both black and white participants in the focus group shared this response Elizabeth A Skewes and Heather Black What s News in the United States in Shoemaker amp Cohen News Around the World 2006 p 329 Mohammed Issa Taha Ali What s News in Jordan in Shoemaker amp Cohen News Around the World 2006 p 252 Neta Kliger Vilenchik Memory Setting Applying Agenda Setting Theory to the Study of Collective Memory in On Media Memory 2011 ed Neiger Myers amp Zandberg pp 233 234 Also see Neta Kliger Vilenchik Setting the collective memory agenda Examining mainstream media influence on individuals perceptions of the past Memory Studies 7 4 October 2014 a b c Graber Doris A 1980 Mass Media and American Politics Congressional Quarterly Press a b Queen s University Department of Political Studies Queen s University Perse Media Effects And Society 2001 55 Mark A Schuster et al A National Survey of Stress Reactions After the September 11 2011 Terrorist Attacks New England Journal of Medicine 345 20 15 November 2001 Terr et al 1999 Children s symptoms in the wake of Challenger a field study of distant traumatic effects and an outline of related conditions American Journal of Psychiatry 156 10 1536 44 doi 10 1176 ajp 156 10 1536 PMID 10518163 Gavin Rees The Trauma Factor in Fowler Watt amp Allan eds Journalism 2013 Altheide David L 1997 The News Media the Problem Frame and the Production of Fear Sociological Quarterly 38 4 647 668 doi 10 1111 j 1533 8525 1997 tb00758 x Perse Media Effects And Society 2001 1 10 Perse Media Effects And Society 2001 12 Some media may be so pervasive and so consistent in their effects that their impact is not noticeable After all it is almost impossible find someone who doesn t watch television in industrialized societies And those light viewers associate regularly with others who do watch television Morgan 1986 suggested that the longer we live with television the smaller television s observable impact may become Zhong Searching for Meaning 2006 pp 17 18 McCombs Maxwell E Shaw Donald L 1972 The Agenda Setting Function of Mass Media Public Opinion Quarterly 36 2 176 doi 10 1086 267990 Perse Media Effects And Society 2001 98 99 Perse Media Effects And Society 2001 100 When issues are obtrusive or directly experienced such as inflation the public does not need the news media to alert them to its importance But the less direct experience that they have with an issue the more they depend on the news media for awareness So agenda setting appears to be stronger for less personally involving issues Tien Vu Hong Guo Lei McCombs Maxwell E 2014 Exploring the World Outside and the Pictures in Our Heads A Network Agenda Setting Study Journalism and Mass Communication Quarterly 91 4 a b Brands set to stay classy with Anchorman 2 5 November 2013 a b How nonstop marketing killed my buzz for Anchorman 2 theweek com 19 December 2013 a b OPINION EXCHANGE Don Shelby An anchorman s take on Anchorman 2 Star Tribune a b How Facebook stole the news business 3 February 2018 a b Facebook announces 300 million local news investment NBC News Facebook investing 300 million in local news initiatives www cbsnews com Sources and further reading EditAllan Stuart News Culture 2nd ed McGraw Hill Open University Press 2004 ISBN 0 335 21074 0 Ayalon Ami The Press in the Arab Middle East A History Oxford UP 1995 ISBN 0 19 508780 1 Bakker Gerben Trading Facts Arrow s Fundamental Paradox and the Origins of Global News Networks In International Communication and Global News Networks Historical Perspectives Hampton Press 2011 Berkowitz Dan ed Social Meanings of News A Text Reader SAGE 1997 ISBN 0 7619 0075 6 Boyd Barrett Oliver and Tehri Rantanen eds The Globalization of News SAGE 1998 ISBN 0 7619 5386 8 Chakravartty Paula and Katharine Sarikakis Media Policy and Globalization Palgrave Macmillan 2006 ISBN 1 4039 7738 0 Cloud Barbara The Coming of the Frontier Press How the West Was Really Won Northwestern UP 2008 ISBN 978 0 8101 2508 7 Cranfield G A The Press and Society From Caxton to Northcliffe London Longman 1978 ISBN 0 582 48983 0 Dayan Daniel and Elihu Katz Media Events The Live Broadcasting of History Harvard University Press 1992 ISBN 0 674 55955 X Distelrath Gunther The Development of the Information and Communication Systems in Germany and Japan up to the End of the Nineteenth Century Senri Ethnological Studies 52 March 2000 Fang Irving A History of Mass Communication Six Information Revolutions Boston Focal Press Butterworth Heineman 1997 ISBN 0 240 80254 3 Fosu Modestus The Press and Political Participation Newspapers and the Politics of Linguistic Exclusion and Inclusion in Ghana Dissertation accepted at University of Leeds Institute of Communication Studies June 2004 Fowler Watt Karen and Stuart Allan Journalism New Challenges v 1 02 Centre for Journalism amp Communications Bournemouth University 2013 ISBN 978 1 910042 00 7 Geniets Anne The Global News Challenge Market Strategies of International Broadcasting Organizations in Developing Countries New York Taylor amp Francis Routledge 2013 ISBN 978 0 415 64066 4 Hachten William A with Harva Hachten The World News Prism Changing Media of International Communication Fourth edition Iowa State University Press 1996 ISBN 0 8138 1571 1 Heyd Uriel Reading newspapers press and public in eighteenth century Britain and America Oxford Voltaire Foundation 2012 ISBN 978 0 7294 1042 7 Hills Jill The Struggle for Control of Global Communication The Formative Century University of Illinois Press 2002 ISBN 0 252 02757 4 John Richard R and Jonathan Silberstein Loeb eds Making News The Political Economy of Journalism in Britain and America from the Glorious Revolution to the Internet 2015 Kallioinen Mika Information communication technology and business in the nineteenth century The case of a Finnish merchant house Scandinavian Economic History Review 52 1 2004 Kessler Karlhenz Royal Roads and Other Questions of the Neo Assyrian Communication System Proceedings of the 10th Anniversary Symposium of the Neo Assyrian Text Corpus Project Helsinki 7 11 September 1995 Lampe Markus and Florian Ploeckl Spanning the Globe The Rise of Global Communications Systems and First Globalization Australian Economic History Review 54 3 November 2014 Lim Hyunyang Kim Take Writing News Information And Documentary Culture in Late Medieval England Dissertation accepted at University of Maryland 2006 Manoff Robert Karl and Michael Schudson eds Reading The News A Pantheon Guide to Popular Culture New York Pantheon Books 1986 ISBN 0 394 54362 9 McCusker J J amp C Gravesteijn The Beginnings of Commercial and Financial Journalism The Commodity Price Currents Exchange Rate Currents and Money Currents of Early Modern Europe Amsterdam Neha 1991 ISBN 90 71617 27 0 McNair Brian Cultural Chaos Journalism news and power in a globalised world New York Routledge Informa 2006 ISBN 978 0 415 33913 1 Milner Stephen J Fanno bandire notificare et expressamente comandare Town Criers and the Information Economy of Renaissance Florence I Tatti Studies in the Italian Renaissance 16 1 2 Fall 2013 Mohammadi Ali ed International Communication and Globalization A Critical Introduction London SAGE 1997 ISBN 0 7619 5553 4 Neiger Motti Oren Myers and Eyal Zandberg On Media Memory Collective Memory in a New Media Age Houndsmills Basingstoke UK Palgrave Macmillan 2011 ISBN 978 0 230 27568 3 Parenti Michael Inventing Reality The Politics of News Media New York St Martin s Press 1993 ISBN 0 312 08629 6 Park Robert E News as a Form of Knowledge A Chapter in the Sociology of Knowledge American Journal of Sociology 45 5 March 1940 Palmer Michael B International News Agencies Palgrave Macmillan Cham 2019 excerpt Parsons Wayne The Power of the Financial Press Journalism and economic opinion in Britain and America Edward Elgar 1989 ISBN 1 85278 039 8 Perse Elizabeth M Media Effects And Society Mahwah NJ Lawrence Erlbau Associates 2001 ISBN 0 8058 2505 3 Pettegree Andrew The Invention of News How the World Came to Know About Itself New Haven Yale University Press 2014 ISBN 978 0 300 17908 8 Rampton Sheldon and John Stauber Trust Us We re Experts How Industry Manipulates Science and Gambles With Your Future New York Jeremy P Tarcher Putnam 2001 ISBN 1 58542 059 X Salmon Lucy Maynard The Newspaper and the Historian New York Oxford University Press American Branch 1923 Schudson Michael Discovering the News A Social History of American Newspapers New York Basic Books Inc 1978 ISBN 0 465 01669 3 Shoemaker Pamela J and Akiba A Cohen eds News Around the World Content Practitioners and the Public New York Routledge 2006 ISBN 0 415 97505 0 Silberstein Loeb Jonathan The International Distribution of News The Associated Press Press Association and Reuters 1848 1947 2014 Silverblatt Art and Nikolai Zlobin International Communications A Media Literacy Approach Armonk NY M E Sharpe Inc 2004 ISBN 0 7656 0974 6 Smith Anthony The Newspaper An International History London Thames amp Hudson 1979 ISBN missing Starr Paul The Creation of the Media Political Origins of Modern Communication New York Basic Books 2004 ISBN 0 465 08193 2 Stephens Mitchell A History of News From the Drum to the Satellite New York Viking 1988 ISBN 0 670 81378 8 Straubhaar Joseph and Robert LaRose Communications Media in the Information Society Updated edition Belmont CA Wadsworth Publishing Company Thompson 1997 ISBN 0 534 52128 2 Wenzlhuemer Roland Connecting the Nineteenth Century World The Telegraph and Globalization Cambridge University Press 2013 ISBN 978 1 107 02528 8 Wolfe Thomas C Governing Soviet Journalism The Press and the Socialist Person After Stalin Indiana University Press 2005 ISBN 0 253 34589 8 Wood James History of International Broadcasting London Peter Peregrinus Ltd 1992 ISBN 0 86341 281 5 Zhang Xiantao The Origins of the Modern Chinese Press The influence of the Protestant missionary press in late Qing China Abingdon UK Routledge 2007 ISBN 0 415 38066 9 Zhong Bu Searching for Meaning Multi Level Cognitive Processing of News Decision Making Among U S and Chinese Journalists Dissertation accepted at University of Maryland College Park 2006 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to News News media by country at Curlie Portals Current events Journalism News Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title News amp oldid 1153283617, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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