Showing posts with label JN1001 - The Journalist and Society. Show all posts
Showing posts with label JN1001 - The Journalist and Society. Show all posts

Monday, June 11, 2012

JN1001 Revision Before Exam

The following is the areas and practice I had in revising subject content for JN1001. 

Week 2 - The Print Revolution

The Printing Press was a device made for applying pressure to any kind of surface using a movable handset of block letters acting as a way to transfer the image. The printing press had replaceable and movable letters and the invention remained largely unchanged for almost 300 years.

The device was invented in 1450 by a German goldsmith, Johann Gutenberg. Prior to this printing was carried out using a carved woodblock. By 1500 there were presses established in 250 places in Europe as well as 13m books in circulation.

Double sided printing started occurring during the 1800s.

The power of news was grasped in wars such as the Civil War 1642 when news was used as propaganda. The press became used to bolster support for the political cause.


What is the significance of the Print Revolution?
The print revolution led to several effects enabling for the mass distribution of ideas and the development of languages within countries for all classes of people. The mass distribution of papers from the press was threatening as information was able to be conveyed to so many.


What are the printing presses that have existed throughout history?
The German Goldsmith's printing Press by Johann Gutenberg known as the Gutenberg Press - Invented in 1450.  Prior to this Japan and China used wooden blocks.

1833 The Rotary Press - Allowed for millions of copies on a page in a single day.
1883 - The Linotype machine allowed for much faster printing of many more papers.


What were the effects of shifting from oral to print culture?
The shift from an oral to print culture affected the nature of human consciousness in that print represented an abstraction of thought. It also gave precedence to linearity.

The printing press meant governments and organisations needed to enforce censorship. The Catholic Church  had an index of Prohibited Books that were forbidden to be read while in 1515 Sultan Selim I issed a decree punishing printing with the death penality.


What changed in the 1850s? Literate class & railway network... What was this effect?
The literacy rate among those in the 1850s had risen greatly for the working-class. The growth of the railway network also meant that papers could be distributed faster to regional locations often reaching their destination the same day of printing.


Was it an agent or catalyst? 
The technology shift from the manuscript to the printing press increased literacy by reducing the expense of publishing books and making the process less time and labour intensive.  Printing press technology altered education by making available books that provide a new visual aid to learning.   Additionally the printing press served as a catalyst for many world movements and events by providing an effective way to disseminate political and religious views.  Today our society is in the midst of another technology shift that is transforming education. Five hundred years after its invention, the printing press can help us understand the growth and impact the Internet on literacy, knowledge and democracy.

Broadcast

The earliest broadcast occured in the 1800s when Maxwell theorised the existence of electromagnetic waves as "luminous ether."

Sound was then transmitted in 1877 and Hertz was formed as the sector which verifies the existence of EM waves.

Orson Well’s take on Radio when interviewed in the 70s


“Back then, radio was really big. It was a big piece of furniture in our living rooms, like TV today, and it occupied a big piece of our lives. Radio in those days, before the tube and the transistor, wasn’t just a noise in somebody’s pocket. It was a voice of authority, too much so…at least I thought so. I figured it was time to take the mickey out of some of that authority.”

1930 - 1945 -  Franklin D. Roosevelt’s “fireside chats” became enormously successful and attracted more listeners than the most popular radio shows during the "Golden Age of Radio."  (The Great Depression)

AM was the first radio signal while the popular frequency today, FM started increasing in popularity during the 70s. In April 1961 FCC approved the Zenith-GE standards for FM broadcasting.

1980s - New forms of radio started emerging such as talk back and music countdowns.

What is the history of the radio? It's investors Tesla & Marconi. 
Nikola Tesla was the father of radio who researched and developed a means to reliably produce radio frequencies and demonstrated this by sending signals over great distances. Guglielmo Marconi invented radio by setting up his first radio company in London in 1897.


What is the History of the Television? I.e. Electromagnetisim via the cathode ray tube, Baird's television (the transmission of imaged over the wires) 
The study of electromagnetism was done by Joseph Henry and Michael Faraday which led to Abbe Giovana and Caselli's discovery of transmitting still-frame images over telegraph wires.

In Australia television began in Melbourne during 1929 and later expanded to Brisbane who experimented with transmissions by amateur station VK4CM.

By 1960 70 per cent of homes in Sydney and Melbourne had a TV set. Colour TV came to Australia in March 1975. While the SBS launched in October 1980.

Week 3 - The Public Sphere

What is the definition of The Public Sphere?  

An area in social life where people can get together and freely discuss and identify societal problems, and through that discussion influence political action.

What is the history of public sphere in Ancient Greece and Rome? 

The public sphere existing throughout ancient Greece and Roman times existed in a literal place for exampe the 6th century BC forum in Rome and the Agora in Greece. In was in these places that discussions occurred.


What is the evolutionary changes leading to change in the public sphere e.g. monarchy (absolute ruler) to democratic elections? 

The public sphere helped ordinary citizens to become involved in public discussions about common issues allowing for the power of the absolute ruler to move towards 'the people.'

What is Jurgen Habermas famous for? 

He is perhaps best known for his theory of the 'public sphere'. His work focused on the foundations of social theory the analysis of societies and democracy.


The Frankfurt School? 

A group of thinkers who became disillusioned with the narrow way Marxism was interpreted (eg orthodox Communist party intepretations)Re-applied Marxism to help clarify social conditions that Marx would never have been aware of.

The public sphere as a political space? 

Allowed for the promotion of political debate and enabled democracy. Habermas believed it should only involve ‘rational debate’ and engage with ‘serious issues’ so excluding entertainment, emotion and ‘soft’ news.

What were some of Habermas' idealistic views? 
  • Disregarded status and political beliefs.
  • The church and the state still maintained dominance  over issues of ‘common concern’
  • Inclusivity - if it only represented a certain type of ‘public’ but claimed to act as the public’s mouthpiece, it was not representative.
What has the media sphere enlarged too today?  

www, virtual spaces, virtual communities on the net, social aggregation that emerges from the Net. Webs of personal relationships.

Media Sphere - Mediasphere is a space where ideas can be negotiated exchanged and discussed so it plays an important role in the public sphere.

The media sphere has enlarged to news being manufactured by people and institutions with money, moral clout, or other forms of power. Mass media play out a double roll here, both as the vehicle for competitive spectacles and as the source of news.

What is the new public sphere a blend of? 

The new public sphere has emerged to a blend of webs of media all talking back and forth to each other with a dialogic relationship between the different media forms. Cross-Promotional opportunities have risen while voting on mobile phones has become a popular way for interactive responses from an audience.

The post-modern public sphere is seen in politics where humour is used to make a political poin.


The mediasphere has legitimated private issues as being worthy of public discussion.It provides us with a way of ‘working through’ ideas and issues. 


Week Four - The Sixties

A Journalists' role in social, political and cultural upheaval in the 60s during significant wars such as the Cold War, Cuban missile crisis and the vietnam war. What effects did this have on those generations the 'baby boomers'. 

'New' Journalism - Was a phrase thought up in the sixties that summed up the new forms of journalism including; literary journalism, narrative journalism, literary realism and 'Gonzo' journalism. 

Some history... 


TV – (most important source of news) capturing events such as counterculture -  ‘the Hippies’, the Vietnam War.
Immersion - During the sixties Journalists challenged the notion of objectivity in reporting were the journalists was seen as becoming part of the story aka gonzo journalism.
New Journalism – Tom Wolfe describes it as ‘an introduction of detailed realism into English literature in the 18th century was like the introduction of  electricity into machine technology’

What was the relationship between journalism and literature? 

Journalists were able to discover the techniques which gave a novel it's flare and used within news which gave power to immediacy, concrete reality and emotional involvement.


What were the literacy techniques used by journalists to cover journalistic subjects?  

Newspaper stories were using literary techniques to set the tone and mood of a story. These news items were made up of scenes and characters were developed throughout often seen throughout narrative journalism which must contain veracity (truth).


How was the time spent with subjects greater in the sixties compared with today? 

The sixties was a time where journalists were being immersed in their news. This was seen when during 1966 journalists had permission to go into battle with solider in Vietnam. Other placed journalists have been allowed to go into include training with professional footballers and riding with the Hell's Angels.

Hunter S. Thompson on Gonzo…

Believed in the right of a journalist to be ‘subjective’. "Objective journalism is one of the main reasons American politics has been allowed to be so corrupt for so long.” Hunter S. Thompson on covering politics.

Week Five - Photojournalism 

During this period media became enlightened to the effectiveness images have in telling stories. The press grasped the power of photojournalism which in many senses created a deeper meaning that what words on paper could portray.

Throughout some of the best photo journalism images photographers have used controlling techniques to manipulate lighting, composition, angle, perspective and many more creative flares.

Even before it is linked to words, the press photograph produces meaning, constitutes a text, a discourse about the event it represents.


Henri Cartier Bresson, ‘the decisive moment’ - ordinary photographs, especially when uprooted from their practical functions, contain a wealth of unintended, unpredictable meanings. There is a creative fraction of a second when you are taking a picture. Your eye must see a composition or an expression that life itself offers you, and you must know with intuition when to click the camera.

"There is nothing in this world that does not have a decisive moment"

Eddie Adams, Magnum photographers 1947 - aimed to use photography in the service of humanity, and provided arresting, widely viewed images.

Living Room  War - Kent State University - Four students shot and killed by Ohio National Guard, others wounded, at a Vietnam War protest on 4 May 1970.

Executing Nguyen Van Lem, a Viet Cong Officer - The general killed the Viet Cong; I killed the general with my camera. Still photographs are the most powerful weapon in the world.

How has the media been manipulated throughout wars such as the Gulf War or Iraq War? (Gulf War - Saddam Hussein of Iraq occupying neighbouring Kuwait in August 1990)

Week Six  - Journalism Under Fire

Disasters are played out in the media through continuous coverage that saturates our news. This has been seen with events such as CNN, the Tiananmen Square Protests of 1989, The first Golf War. The coverage drives policy makers to have a position on what is occurring.

How is war covered in war zones? (Objectivity, compassion fatigue, suffering v. infotainment, framing war stories v. victim/rescuer, patriotism of 9/11)

CNN practice "saturation coverage" where the even is covered almost instantaneously which helps to drive policymakers to have a position, i.e. the coverage of the Golf War, the Bali Bombings etc. 

Each generation has its own increasingly complicated interpretation of the war’s meaning and mysteries, its heroes and villains, and more than 50 years later it retains the power to shock and surprise.

The stereotypical journalists that objectifies stories are not generally trained to know how to deal with trauma, though the image exists that journalists covering disasters have 'armour' that leaves them unaffected when this is not the case.

"objectivity is an illusion - journalists should embrace passionate, moral journalism instead of standing back watching people suffer in the name of objectivity." ~ Martin Bell, BBC Journalist.

Objectivity - Within a journalist is a position of detachment rather than neutrality from the subject. Suggests the absence of subjectivity, personalized involvement and judgement - neutral.

“Pictures don’t tell us the answers. They tell us why the questions are important.” Richard Lacyo Time magazine

The question of how much to show is risen as compassion fatigue can occur causing those interested to switch off to the disaster. A balance is required - this acts as a constraint on the media.

When covering a tragedy it is often written as a human interest story; focus on the how and why rather than simply answering the who, what, where and when.

Week Seven - The Rise of Spin 

The rise of spin occurred when many government agencies and large firms started forming public relation units. Theses units or parts of the organisation set a strategic sustained effort to establish and maintain mutual understanding between their organisation and the public.
Promotional Culture - Using news to promote products and other competing influences.  The typical talk show of a morning where free advertising is done through publicity of special event and merchandising etc.

Promotional Culture  manufactures publicity, gaining advertising space without paying and being news, it gives the company more credibility.

Chequebook Journalism where 'exclusive interviews' take place to promote something that other media than take up.

Cross Promotion of news occurs such as Foxtel promotes publishers HarperCollins/NewsCorp (one of the 3 largest international media groups)
How advertises can infiltrate the news - via AAP etc... It is easy for businesses to gain a news story with sites such as AAP MediaNet and PR Newswire offering press release distribution which is picked by my many journalists as checking the wires is apart of the daily routine.

“Accessing the wire service is a routine part of the daily hunt for stories and a service we regularly draw upon in our presentation of news.” ~ Commercial radio talkback producer. 

A Decline in number of resources used in newsrooms has made it more affordable to re-write a press release and accept TV footage. In the space of eight years a quarter of newsroom jobs no-longer exist.

Who sets the Agenda? The agenda is often set by PR. 80 percent of stories in the daily news paper are the result of PR companies or PR individuals while 20 per cent are thought up by the newsroom. 

Proactive Marketing such as Police TV shows and Boarder Patrol that aim at increasing the public image of what the public think of various different government agenices.

"public relations is anti-conflict and journalism is pro-conflict" ~ Simons M. The Content Makers p262.

Week Seven - The Rise of Promotional Culture

Promotional Culture is the critical reflection of the impact of advertising on the shaping of contemporary news culture. 

Advertising is the form of communication intended to persuade an audience to purchase or support a cause. As seen recently with the Carbon Tax TV ads that talk of payments but leave out critical information in-order to persuade the target market.

Promotional Culture has affected celebrities, reality TV and documentaries - mockumentaries.

News is actually a narrative - The different events are put together within a narrative. By, i.e. taking the disturbances of the world and presenting them in a way which is reassuring/entertaining.
Publicity is the 'free editorial or free coverage of television, radio, the papers and magazines," Kerry O'Brien. 
Infotainment is "information-based media content or programming that also includes entertainment content in an effort to enhance popularity with audiences and consumers..
Journalism is moving into a form that conveys serious information about issues to a form of entertainment.

Documentaries... Mockumentaries... Do they show or construct the truth? No, but they have an agenda set before the story is created to help with direction. The convey the truth but it is a constructed truth often thought of to exploit their subject.

Week Eight - Journalism and 9/11

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Week Ten - Media Control

The news is a product not only of deliberate manipulation, but of ideological and economic conditions under which the media operate. 

What drives the news: commercial imperative? Fourth estate?
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Newspapers are driven by circulation, TV by their ratings... (maybe compare to how the Townsville Bulletin is now flat-wrapped)

Newspapers are ran as two separate businesses; one sells content the other advertising space. The first area makes a loss while the second makes enough profit to support the first.

The news is a product of manipulation of the ideological and economic conditions under which media operate. Media organisations are heavily influenced by owners, governments and businesses of interest which causes stories to be framed in a way that features some angles but downplays others.

Media Bias is the coverage of a political campaign in such a way to favour the vilify corporate interests.

Media Barons - Those with significant control of a public company in the mass media may also be called "media moguls", "tycoons", "barons", or "bosses"

The Australian and The Daily Telegraph are seen as the daily news agenda setters in Australia.(ABA report 2001)

NEWS LTD has been in trouble for the alleged bias coverage of the debate over the stolen generation and the US invasion of Iraq.


What is Media Bias? Corporate Bias (Political campaigns) 

Ownership of media in Australia and globally? Fairfax Media, News Media, SC Media, Seven Network Holdings, News Corp, APN, Pay TV Ltd.


Mining and media baron Gina Rinehard owns the largest amount of shares in Fairfax and Network Ten.

Week Eleven – New Media

What is new media? Digital media are forms of media content that combine and integrate data, text, sound and images stored in digital forms and distributed through broadband fibre-optic cables.

The flow of news has reversed from the typical media > news audience to audience > news > media/audience.

Participation/Citizen Journalism - Is when citizens exercise their right to blog. Can be done by anyone!

Big Media have treated the news as a lecture. We told you what the news was. You bought it, or you didn't. (Dan Gillmor former San Jose Mercury News reporter turned blogger)

Tomorrow's news reporting will be more of a conversation (Dan Gillmor)

The digital journalist might say "That's some of what we did our best to find out today.”(source Andrew Heyward President of CBS News)  

There are hundreds of millions of blogs setup around the world.  

Personal blogs comment on public issues (this is the way it originally started) after 9/11 bloggers started writing the news.

Murdock's speech on the Role of Newspapers in the digital age in 2005.

"They want control over their media, instead of being controlled by it…”They want news that speaks to them personally, that affects their lives." ~ R. Murdoch. 

The difference between blogs and mainstream media is transparency, the ethics of the conversation, ethics of correction and the ethics of immediacy.

Blogging today within the media has seen news organisations adopt blogging with news.com.au containing close to 50 blogs for their journalists and Fairfax papers containing around 40 blogs.

Mainstream journalists also blog in their spare time to!   

Blogs, Twitter and Social Networking has given news more urgency. With some events being found out through online networks rather than via phone or email.
  • Blogging
  • Participant – citizen journalism
  • History of blogging 
  • Murdoch and blogging
  • Blogs as News – solider blogs and milblogs
  • Bloggers breaking news – Osama Bin Laden death
  • Construction of social subjectivity – judgement of journalist more honestly acknowledged
  • Bloggers and profitability
  • Bloggers and censorship
What is the history of new media? Development of the www and types of new media? Blogs started surfacing when web 2.0 was born. Blogs have increase in popularity since 2000 with US statistics showing there to be at least 156 million blogs worldwide. The development of the web with increased interactivity via social network and other websites have given news an urgency to be published almost as soon as it is heard about.

What is the idea of a networked society?  shift from industrial (depending on new energy sources) to informational mode of development (knowledge & creativity)

What are trends seen with online news? Online news has grown from just one story a day to stories being published almost immediately. Online news has grown to include the story, pictures and in many cases video and audio as well. Online news sites still hold the largest audience at around 60% while blogs as a news source are used around 30% of the time.  

Changing patterns of news - news on demand, i.e. Mobile phones... Increased connectivity has meant news organisations need to be aware of what mediums their news is being accessed from, source specific mobile sites are developed to enrich their user experience in order to get return visitors.

Week Twelve - Creative Industries

Definition: ‘those activities which have their origin in individual creativity, skill and talent and which have the potential for wealth and job creation through the generation and exploitation of intellectual property.’

Welcome to the Conceptual Age -  "The future belongs to a very different kind of person with a very different kind of mind – creators and empathisers, pattern recognisersand meaning makers. These people – artists, inventors, designers, storytellers, caregivers, consolers, big picture thinkers – will reap society’s richest rewards." ~ Daniel Pink, A Whole New Mind in Nightingale V. New Media Worlds. 


Industries exist today that didn't exist 10 years ago because of creativity! Creative Industries have been fueled by the relationship between information, knowledge and creativity.

The Digital-Age has enabled audiences to play a bigger role in content creation. This has been seen through sites like Youtube, Flickr etc.

Demand for creativity has grown around. This has been complimented by better animation tools and cross-platform compatibility.

The rise of creativity is a key factor in our economy and society. The ABC has taken hold of creativity with ABC Open being setup purposely to help fuel those creating digital stories.   


The Government has seen the power of creative industries in the economy and in-order for it to grow faster the government has rolled out programs like the NBN. 

"National Broadband network rollout will mean creative enterprises will be able to take local businesses from a local to a global market."

The QLD Government has proposed a national strategy for developing the digital content industry. 


Creative Industires affects Journalists... When stories are produced now it is delivered in a variety of forms; radio, tv, web, twitter, etc.

News on Demand - Like other mediums, the new interactive user can get their news when they like.

The Multi-Media Journalist tells their story differently throughout narrative storytelling while a reporting approach is sometimes sidelined depending upon the story.

The Multi-Medis Journalists establishes a strong post-production environment, ensures they have efficient editing techniques, archives and compresses and works in a team.

User-generated content (UGC) and their applications are by far the largest type of online content, both now and in any foreseeable future.


CHALLENGES - Australia's laws have not kept up with the technological evolution or with the changes in the diverse modes of media production and consumption. (Crawford & Lumby APO)

The Information age - Conceptual age? Identification of creativity as a key driver of growth and innovation in a knowledge-based economy

The Information Age - The Information Age, also commonly known as the Computer Age or Digital Age, is an idea that the current age will be characterized by the ability of individuals to transfer information freely, and to have instant access to information that would have been difficult or impossible to find previously.

The Conceptual Age - In the Conceptual Age, we can count on the commoditization of pretty much anything and everything out there.  No matter how innovative a product may be, it’s almost a guarantee that someone else will either copy it or improve on it to grab a share of your market.  That is why “design” is such a talked about concept these days.

The rise of creative industries? ‘Those activities which have their origin in individual creativity, skill and talent and which have the potential for wealth and job creation through the generation and exploitation of intellectual property.’

Wednesday, May 9, 2012

Creative Industries

Creative Industries has been a big thing since around the 1990s. It has moved even faster since the internet has been grasped by media agencies.

Creative Industries
Multi-Media Journalism is one of those brand new degrees which's aim is to arm you with skills that employees will like.

We are now starting to move from the Information age to the Conceptual Age.

Daniel Pink says this A whole New Mind in Nightingale V. New Media Worlds...

"The last few decades have belonged to a certain kind of person with a certain kind of mind—computer programmers who could crank code, lawyers who could craft contracts, MBAs who could crunch numbers. But the keys to the kingdom are changing hands. The future belongs to a very different kind of person with a very different kind of mind—creators and empathizers, pattern recognizers, and meaning makers. These people—artists, inventors, designers, storytellers, caregivers, consolers, big picture thinkers—will now reap society’s richest rewards and share its greatest joys." Read more: http://www.oprah.com/spirit/Excerpt-from-A-Whole-New-Mind-by-Daniel-Pink#ixzz1uK49b7Su

The future of creative industries can encounter; advertising, architecture, arts and antiques, crafts, designs, film, vido, photography, software, computer games, music, publishing, television and radio. A large area of creative industries.

So, what's the relationship between Information, Knowledge and Creativity.

The Digital Age - Has enabled audiences to play a bigger role in content creation.

New Technology is allowing consumers to have a greater say, communicating online directly to creative producers.

The demand for creative products is growing across the globe. The public is demanding more from CI which provides businesses with engaging content.

The History of Creative Industries - Have their grounds in 'job creation through the generation and exploitation of intellectual property.'

The rise of human creativity is a key factor in our economy.

Identification of Creativity is a key driver of growth and innovation in a knowledge-based economy.

The NBN rollout is very much apart of the local and global market in terms of the creative industry. Means content can be delivered quicker to the wider globe rather than being slowed by a standard broadband connection.

Screen Australia is investigating in the development of digital and emerging content through its All Media Fund.

How does this affect Journalism??? Australia is moving to a convergent network environment. Radio, TV and Newspapers work together.

Media Storm is an award winning creative industries organisation that prides itself on delivering the highest quality digital stories which have a cinematic experience.

Watch a story by Jessica Dimmock entitles the Ninth Floor here - http://mediastorm.com/publication/the-ninth-floor (Graphic Content)

Multi-Media Journalism is about establishing a strong post-production environment. Efficient editing techniques, archiving and compression and teamwork.

Activism - Achieving social/cultural/political ends to mobilise support on a global level. Point of view inherently local.

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Wednesday, May 2, 2012

New media


New media is digital forms of media content that combine and integrate data, text, sound and images stored in digital forms and distributed to large audience for viewing. New media is manipulable at all stages of creation, storage, delivery and use.

New Media Content - Networkable - Can be shared and exchanged between large numbers of users simultaneously and across distances. Dense - Large amounts of information can be stored on network servers. Compressible, Impartial - digital information is indifferent to what forms it represents.

History of new Media - PPT slide Below

A network society emerged at the end of the 20th and 21st century according to Manuel Castells. 

Shift from industrial (depending on new energy sources) to informational mode of development (dependent on technology of knowledge generation)

Web 2.0 opened up the viewer to dialogue with the content. 

Changes in TV - Increase in using citizens to supply video to CNN - ABC Open - Shifted from creating content publishing USG Content. 

Blogging and Participant / Citizen Journalism


Do you trust a blogger as much as a journalist? 
The flow of news for participant / citizen journalist.

Sender > Message > Receiver. 
Media > News > Audience. 
Audience > News > Media / Audience.

Freedom of the press belongs to those who own one. Blogging means anyone can own one. 

Mainstream Meda - Big media have treated the news as a lecture. News told you what the news was. You bought it, or you didn't. (Dan Gillmor former San Jose Mercury News Reporter turned blogger)

Tomorrow's News - Reporting and production will be more of a conversation. The lines will blur between producers and consumers, changing the role of both.

The future - impact on news from blogs/new media

Walter Cronkite used to end his news bulletins with, "That's the way it is." 

Whereas the digital journalist may say, "That's some of what we did our best to find out today." 

MSM (Mainstream Media) shrinking - depends on identifiable rules - Consumers trust and rely on journalists less, and expect more of them, because they have alternative sources of information.

Agenda setting has been replaced by links to further information - citizen user generated sites setting up linking to news. i.e. in Townsville we have one major newspaper and supposedly the Bulletin did not run one negative story on the proposal to have a V8 Supercars circuit come to Townsville. 

Participation / Citizen news Web 2.0 sites - Video and social networking sites (YouTube - 2005 44m monthly audience in US) Used by politicians and others for exposure / alternative to mainstream media. Blogging - As of 16 Feb 2011 accounted for 1.6 million public blogs in existence. Wikipedia - 2007 has been developing into a news source - most obvious is the coverage of Virginia Tech shootings - 750,000 visits in two days after event. 

MEAA - Have conducted an excellent appraisal of where journalism is now - Click here to read more - Future of Journalism.

Blogs as a source of news : Blogs (30%), Web sites (81%), TV (78%), Radio (73%), Newspapers (69%), Magazines (38%). 

55% believe blogging will be an important aspect of future journalism. 

R Murdoch despite recent media attention he pointed out that future readers wouldn't access the news through traditional mediums back in 2005. 

"They want control over their media, instead of being controlled by it..." 

"They want news that speaks to them personally that affects their lives." 

Read more of Murdoch's speech here.

"Plainly, the Internet allows us to be more granular in our advertising, targeting potential consumers based on where they've surfed and what products they've bought. The ability to more precisely target customers using technology- powered forms of advertising - contextual-based targeting and behavioral targeting -- represent a great opportunity for us to maintain and even grow market share and are clearly the future of advertising.


Bloggers and profitability - Few independent bloggers make no profit. 

New media encourages dialogue with the wider public by enabling comments etc. Allowing the voice of judgement for the journalist is more honestly acknowledged. (Flew p. 154)

The difference with blogs - Ethics of transparency, Ethics of conversation (not one-sided), Ethics of the link (to provide more information).

Abraham Zapruder was an American manufacture of women's clothing. He was filming a home-movie when Kennedy's head was shot by a bullet. He then sold this footage to Life magazine for $50,000. The following day the filme was purchased for $150,000 (equivalent to $1million today).

ISP Blocks on blogs; India, Iran, China, Malaysia - Issues of inequalities of access so Internet should not be considered a virtual public sphere because of this (Flew 165)

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Wednesday, April 11, 2012

Reporting on Disasters - 9/11

9/11 Terrorist Attack on World Trade Center
Struggles surrounded the reporting of 9/11 which lead reporters to have patriotic reports. Some facts about 9/11: 
  • The largest mass killing on US soil.
  • Technology brought images from the scene so that public eye could view the events. 
  • Rise of amateurs documenting events.  
  • Divided the world - created distrust. 
  • The enemy framed as the Islamic peril. 
  • Lead to legislations against certain 'types'. 

"It wasn't just a terrorist attack but attacked the economy.

When a journalist attends any disaster there is always grappling with context for the event.

Screenshots of online newspapers at the time when the attack occurred - click here.

"The picture conveyed by the media was as follows: a benevolent, democratic, and peace-loving nation was brutally attacked by insane evil terrorists who hated the United States for its freedoms and affluent way of life." ~ George W Bush.

The Media as meaning maker - Work through trauma has not only individual but collective repercussions. 
The media needs to serve as a conveyer, translator, mediator and meaning maker. 

How does a disaster effect the practice of journalism. 

How does a journalist cope with such horrific events? What does 'best practice' mean?


Media painted those who objected to war as 'the decadent left.'

Limited and Biased Media Coverage

Experts controlled the dominant discourses on terrorism. Produced a rational debate. Little focus on lapse of security. Media spotlight focused on the incidents rather than broader ideas.

Those who were Muslims were forced into a position of apologising for their religion after the attacks.

The Issues with Muslim representation

Militant Islamists as spokespersons for all Muslims. Problems developing effective leadership (democratic), Four major TV networks shared footage - Commercials disappeared.

The main-stream media removed image-intensive graphics. Reduced advertising content - WashingtonPost.com removed all it's homepage advertising.

Newspapers - Provided analysis, typeset was larger and pictures were more prominent.

Amateur news reporters used blogs as a decentralised media. Several major sites connected to the internet were severed but the main back-line stayed functional.

36% of online uses went online looking for news within the first 2 days. 29% of internet users - more than 30m people. Online news category grew 80% in one week.

Blogs - Hundreds of blogs made available eye witness accounts, photographers, video footage. Challenged mainstream media coverage which relying on 'talking heads' to 'man in the street.'

Wednesday, April 4, 2012

Advertising

Obama Rama
How has advertising affected the media?

Narratives are created - The different events of the day are put into a narrative format.

News readers speak with an authoritative, attractive, well spoken creating a distance between events and the sense of feelings.

Buying Bad News - "It's  now a very good day to get out anything we want to bury."

Those who want a say in News - Governments, Social movements, Corporations.

New-Media offers many new advertising opportunities - Geo Advertising, Pup-Up Under. Publicity is designed to turn advertising into news, or editorial content.

Rise of Infotainment - Content or programming that also includes entertainment content is an effort to enhance popularity with audiences and consumers.

Journalism has evolved into a form of entertainment... How much of our news is actually news?

The Obama Crush Video... 


You become a star by manipulating the forms of media that are there to your own ends.

The meaning of Celebrity - Something that we can't quite reach.

Celebrity means celestial ... An Angelic being. Celebrities provide a bridge of meaning between the powerless and powerful.

Celebrity is constructed rather than immanent.

Reality TV forces regular people to conform to the life of a celebrity.

Production of Reality TV is much lower than fictional dramas and increases the amount of infotainment in news.

Self-Improvement plays on our thought of wanting to see what happens.

Documentaries... Can they capture the truth.

Tools are used to select and frame events, editing, point of view and a commentary.

Bowling for Columbine - A documentary by Michael Moore



Moore won an Oscar for the best documentary.

Heston was giving a speech a year after the Columbine as a feature of gratitude for being given a handmade musket - Read more about how the Documentary was exposed - Click here

The cameraman/director is still choosing what to focus on.

Analyzing a Documentary - What was the role of the narrator, The position, Read more from the powerpoint for tips. 

The rise of Spin - PR and Promotion

Those working in PR are planners of meda events and situations. You facilitate the understanding between an organisation and the public.

PR workers are governed by the Public Relation Institue of Australia - http://www.pria.com.au/.

Publicity - Is one of the best ways to promote events and is a way of gaining advertising space without paying for it. PR allows for manufactured advertising.

PR's objective is generally to sell the companies product rather than tell you about it. It provides information / knowledge. 

The media act as promoters - They use checkbook journalism which is where the media pay for interviews. It's a way to make news through 'exclusive interviews.' Other media than take up the story. 

When did PR begin?

The readings this week talk about the 80s as the time when PR become apart of media. Around the time when investigative journalism started to decline. Major expansion of PR companies since the 80s. 

In 2008 there were 47,800 PR practitioners and just 45,000 journalists in Britain.

The increased use of PR by government departments (Malcom Fraser 22 staff - Paul Keating 299) 

QLD Government spent $32 million in 2008 - Government had 200 ministerial advisers, the opposition just 20. 

Why the increase in spin... It feels the pages. It's cheap, It's easy, It's free advertising, It's 

Technology makes it easy to blur the facts. 

MediaNet

The AAP runs a service that companies pay for to distribute their news or advertising from the PR operators, it's called, "MediaNet." - Some releases from MediaNet are unedited in-text ready format. Video is also able to be distributed via MediaNet. Audio news releases can also be completed. 

What Journalists say about newswires... 

What Journalists have said about the AAP Newswire

"A touchstone for journalists in the gallery (press) to check what's happening." David Speers - Sky News Australia

"Accessing the wire service is a routine part of the daily hunt for stories and a service we regularly draw upon in our presentation of news."
Commercial radio talkback producer

"AAP is vital for our news gathering ability because it gives you raw material to work with." RG Capital Radio news director

"AAP's ability to sum it up quickly and succinctly is the prime reason we use it." Commercial radio talkback producer
The BBC editorial Guidelines... Discusses The Press Association (equivalent of AAP) as a single source... http://www.bbc.co.uk/editorialguidelines/ 


The effects of PR - Stories are cheap, quick, lots of celebrity stories, reduced number of sources.

State of Print Media in Australia - By the Australian Press Council 

The study found that out of 2,400 articles across 14 major papers. 40% of stories were only from one source, 60% quoted two sources or less, 5% of newspaper stories quote PR sources.

60%-90% of stories use PR as a source (Tiffen R.)
PR Practiners generate more than half of the content in newspapers - 64% in the Australian alone!

How is the influence of PR measured??? 


PR companies enlist the expertise of officials or experts. Press releases are traced to see if they are taken up by the media.

PR also manages the media... 


Media management - Restricted the flow of information to the public by replacing key personnel in an organisation with former journalists to create new spins on situations that may arise.

Media Managers are advisers... and get paid heaps. (Public Relations - Spin)

Journalism is about Pro-Conflict - PR is Anti-Conflict.

An example of spin regarding the NSW Health Department and a McDonald's Restaurant in Fairfield, NSW is viewable here.

SpinWatch - Is a website that monitors PR and Spin - Spinwatch.org.

Thursday, March 29, 2012

Wars and Disasters Oral Presentation

Hello there I’m Nicholas O’Sullivan and today I be giving you a guided talk, looking at the topic of War & Disasters. I will be highlighting the issue of censorship during war and also looking at whether it is possible for a journalist to convey the enormity of what is happening in a war zone?

It is interesting to note from Yesterday’s lecture what the New York Times reporter Steven Erlanger said about, “how each generation has its own complicated interpretation of the war’s meaning and mysteries, its heroes and villains, and more than 50 years later it retains the power to shock and surprise.” 


Firstly, How clear is our picture of war? If the media’s primary objective when covering foreign affairs, disasters and conflicts is to communicate complex issues in a way that can be understood by the general public.

The reading this week puts it as, essentially the media provide our ‘window to the world.’

Does anyone know what might be the problem with this metaphor of, ‘looking through a window?’

Well, I know myself when I look through a window we are limited to what we can see. There may be something obstructing your view.
This is a problem that many journalists face when reporting on wars and disasters.

To what extent are we seeing inadequate or distorted media-reports on the complex issues?

Our reading this week put it this way as read in Chapter 4. Page 69.

“If two or more journalists are present at the same event, they will not necessarily report in the same way. The emphasis, manner, tone and insight which each journalist brings to bear on a given story are highly dependent upon the personality, experience, education and location of the journalist.”

To add to this journalists are than faced with constraints that limit what can be done.

Hence those in control of journalists in the field reporting on wars and disasters are limited by three main constraints; time, space and access.

Time affects how reporting on events has changed since the 80s where news has become instantaneous such as live coverage of the disaster which forces journalists to be reporting on non-verified accounts by using words like, ‘rumours are circulating’ or ‘unconfirmed reports are speculating.’

So, can you tell me what some of the Big News Events of this century have been? Tsunami, London Bombings, Bali Bombings, 9/11, Hurricane Katrina and the Madrid bombings.

Space also plays a major part in broadcast media. As TV and Radio packages are generally constrained to a 3-minute packages forcing complex issues to be compressed or otherwise known as summarised.
Access to the battlefield has also changed dramatically since a reporter was first allowed in battlefields such as William Howard Russell of The Times.

Russell was known for his coverage of the ‘Charge of the Light Brigade’ during the Crimean War 1853-56. Russell when he saw what the British troops were going through he was appalled and caused a sensation through the UK with the hard-hitting lead articles reported in The Times.

As a result the idea of ‘censorship’ or what’s commonly known as ‘security review’ now days was born - Censoring the media was one way of guaranteeing public support of the conflict. 

Censorship

So, the censorship imposed by the military on the media has limited what they can convey to the public – or us. The military pushed the idea of censorship as, ‘preventing valuable information from falling into enemy hands and thereby jeopardising the safety of the troops.’

Though the constraints of censorship have worked largely for media the rise of the ‘citizen-journalist’ has meant citizens often gain access to where journalists are not allowed. Making the military’s job extremely hard.
An Australian Defence Media Release – To show an example of how the military often control the way the media portray defence related news this slide shows a release from the Defence Media Communications Centre outlining information regarding the death of Captain Bryce Duffy with a few quotes from his commanding officer.

So we learnt just before about the rise of the citizen-journalist. But let’s take a look at what this term actually means. 

The Citizen Journalist as Wikipedia puts it is; Citizen Journalism is the concept of members of the public "playing an active role in the process of collecting, reporting, analyzing, and disseminating news and information." 

To put this into perspective how many citizen journalism avenues or people do you know that exist in Townsville alone? (Slide Eight) 

Just to outline a few from conducting a simple google search, in Townsville we have TownsvillleNewsOnline and MySuburbanNews.

Overseas there is even more citizen journalists, let’s take a look at a story from the Associated Press that uses amateur vision captured by a citizen who most likely would have been fighting but pulled out their recording device at just the right moment to capture Gadhafi’s last moments.

With more and more citizen journalists being empowered through the availability of video sharing sites, blogs and social networks just like the little clip we saw are increasingly being used by media outlets to show snapshots of wars.

Journalists are also limited by what they can play on their mediums. Running too many stories on war often can result in what’s called compassion fatigue.

“Show too much and there is a danger that audiences will either become alienated or desensitised over time to horrors of real war; there is a danger of ‘compassion fatigue.’ (Moeller, 1999)

Likewise showing too little of war as Martin Bell suggests – results in audiences not realising the seriousness of a situation, resulting in public disinterest.

In getting back to our focus question, “Is it possible for a journalist to convey the enormity of what is happening in a war zone?”

Based upon the constraints correspondents face out in the field when reporting on wars and disasters I think journalists and the media can only portray so much.

As social implications of displaying too much and too little as Bell suggests can determine how war turns out.
In getting back to our reading this week the final part of the reading defines ‘real war’ and ‘media war.’

“In real wars, real people die. In media wars, the realities of war such as death and destruction, are both distant and distanced from a non-participating mass audience by the very mediating role of the media.

“Real war is about the sounds, sight, smell, touch and taste of the nasty, brutal business of people killing other people.

“Media war is literally a mediated representation of that reality but which is ultimately a third party or audio-visual ‘snapshot’ of it.

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

The Sixties a Period of Change

The sixties is the period of social, cultural and political upheaval from the 1960s-1975.


Photo: Eddie Adams Vietnam War.
Events during the time included the Vietnam War (between 1959 and 1975). The Vietnam war was between the communist North Vietnam and communist allis v. South Vietnam government support by the US. 1.5 million military personnel died and 2m civilians.

The vietnam war was the first major war to be televised.

The other events during this time was the baby boomers (born around the end of WWII. Counterculture - Popular music Rock n' Roll, music and widespread drug use. Sexual revolution - Experiments in open relationships.

Across the world TV is still the most important source of news for the American public. It is the most powerful influence on public opinion. During the 60s TV went from B&W to Colour and there was no censorship of war journalists.

"Television brought the brutality of war into the comfort of the living room. Vietnam was lost in the living rooms of America -- Not the battlefields of Vietnam." ~ McLuhan's View

Vietnam War occurred in; Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam. From November 1955 to it's close in 1965.
Nick Ut took a photo of a group of children who had been through a Napalm bombing. The picture
essentially changed the way people thought about the Vietnam war.

Eddie Adams took a photo of an American general who shot a Vietnam communist. This was also was circulated in the media at the time.

The Vietnam war was the last time the western media had relative freedom of coverage. That freedom no longer exists now.

Narrative Journalism in the Making


In the sixties Journalism pushed the boundaries of Journalism across all mediums.


Sixties magazines pioneered 'New' Journalism. 
Print Journalism throughout the sixties was often like reading a story - Known as Narrative Journalism.

When we talk about 'New' Journalism we refer to the sixties not New-Media Journalism that refers to the digital age of Journalism.

The phrase coined in the sixties by a group of journalists: Tom Wolfe, Truman Capote, Hunter S. Thompson and Norman Mailer. 

Sixties magazines where looking at how to really get into the story to attract readers; mainly found in mags such as the New Yorker, Rolling Stone, etc.

Also in a similar category is; Literary journalism, Narrative journalism, Literary realism, 'Gonzo' journalism.

'Gonzo' - Is a style of journalism that favoured sarcasm during the 1970s. Pioneered by Hunter S. Thompson.

Historical context - Introduction of details realism into English literature in the 18th century was like the introduction of electricity into machine technology.

There is a relationship between journalists and literature - Charles Dickens writing serialised in the British Press during the 1800s.

The Vietnam was was a massive example in demonstrating the power of Television

Journalists discovered the devices that gave the realistic novel it's unique power: Immediacy, concrete reality, emotional involvement. 

Uses literary techniques - Starts with the tone and mood of a short story i.e. an intimate scene, Story is made up of scenes, the character is developed throughout the novel, uses realistic dialogue, employs a literary narrative. It's creating the whole seen as if you were there. 



Immersion of Journalists - 1966 Journliasts got permission to go into battle with soliders in Vietnam, Into training with professional footballers, riding with the hell's Angles. 

Involvement - Ensuring the interview contains this type of detail when you reconstruct a scene. Detail, detail, detail... is not mere embroidery in prose (Tom Wolfe) Observing mannerisms, detail of speech etc. 

Interviewing Techniques - Can be told in first or third person throwing the subjectivity of the journalist into question. 

Means during the interview: Ask questions about emotions - About how the person was feeling? What were they wearing? What did they say in as exact dialogue as they can remember.  

"Objective journalism is one of the main reasons American politics has been allowed to be so corrupt for so long." ~ Hunter S Thomson. 

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

The Public Sphere Now


Social relations have become 'virtualised'

Chains or webs of media all talking back and forth to each other (John Hartley)

Dialogic (relationship between the different media forms)

Cross-promotional opportunities.

Voting on mobile phones for TV shows - Interactive response from the audience.

Postmodern Public Sphere


Celebrates fragmentation.

Instead of homogenous, unified whole (Habermas) the postmodern public sphere can be multiple incorporating and overlapping others.

Includes the idea of fictional (popular media) and factual (journalism).

Examples of modern day public sphere. 

Humour to make a political point.

Public v Private now is blurred

If the public sphere is to be open to any discussion that affects the population, there cannot be distinctions between "what is" and "what is not" discussed.

Expanded Public Sphere


Oprah talk show, reality TV shows, talkback radio, Internet.

The media-sphere has legitimated private issues as being worthy of public discussion.

It provides us with a way of 'working through' ideas and issues.

I.e. the Morcombes.

Habermas and the new public Sphere


He believes that mass media and globalisation has reduced the effectiveness of the public sphere.

New-Media; Twitter, Facebook, Plus, Youtube, Ustream.

Strengths and Weaknesses of New-Media

Strengths: Increases debate, Highly accessible, Don't need much resources.

Weaknesses: Encourages anonymity, Most inaccessible to wider audience, poorer quality of debate.

The new public sphere has specific boundaries any social group can participate in the discussions.

The public's opinion is active rather than passive.


What role does news play in the public sphere?

Most news services work hegemonically (culturally dominance) reinforcing ideas about how to understand the world in a certain way. 

Dramas, soaps, comedies, blogs are pluralist (a wider range of choices)


Public Sphere

Definition of the public sphere is an area in social life where people can get together and freely discuss and identify societal problems, and through that discussion influence political action.

Public Sphere (spatial concept) - Where meanings can be articulated, distributed or negotiated. 
Public / Private


  • Public sphere mediates between the private sphere and the sphere of public authority. 
  • Can exist in a political space - e.g. 6th century BC forum in Rome. 
Historical Changes

Around 1750 saw ordinary citizens become involved in public discussions about issues of common concern. 

The 'state' developed separately instead of the individual (the ruler, king) and so people could see the chance of contributing instead of being excluded. 

Sociologist that studied the public sphere - Jurgen Habermas - Was the first to tacke the idea of measuring public opinion. The work is considered a foundation of contemporary public sphere theories. 

He sought to examine the state of public view.  

What was his Sphere? Due to specific historical circumstances a new civic society emerged in the 18th century. 
  • New commercial opportunities. 
  • News exchanged. 
  • Growing states of literacy. 
Where did these discussions take place? Habermas privileged the oral in his definition of the public sphere e.g. Britain's coffee houses, France's salons. 

The public sphere as a political space - To promote political debate and enable democracy. Habermas believed the sphere should only involve 'rational debate.'

What was allowed to be discussed; art and literacy, economic matters, political disputes. 

What was wrong with Habermas' Model? 

People were left out; the working class and women. 

Disregarded status and political beliefs. 

The church and the state still maintained dominance over issues of 'common concern'

What replaced the coffee houses? 

The role of the media in changing the public sphere is a contested arena. Mass media play out a double roll here, both as the vehicle for competitive space and mass media.

Propaganda

Biased newscasts occur, embedded journalists, misinformation. Used to shape the individual asking certain questions and not asking others.

Journalists had Freedom in the Vietnam war but it's very much limited in this century.




Monday, March 5, 2012

A touching Citizen Journalism Story on a Homeless Man

Recently when I was catching up on the evening news I came across a story about how Australia's PM may be homeless until 2014 - a sarcastic headline read.

Upon Googling for a little more information on this story too my amazement I found a video on youtube that shows Julia Gillard talking to a homeless man in Brisbane's CBD. 

This video below is quite simple but reminds me of the type of citizen journalism I strive for. Getting out there and getting a story to share with others.

Which brings me back to a lecture reading from last week on the definition of a Journalist. 

"Whether reporting on a local planning decision or a dramatic international conflict, journalists play a key role in society. They keep communities informed and satisfy the public's right to know." - Creative Pool.

I think I may do a follow up story on the video below tomorrow. It has got questions going in my head that I would like to get answered. 




Wednesday, February 29, 2012

History of Radio and Television

Radio

In Australia the Federal Government through the Wireless Telegraphy Act of 1905.

National Anthem broadcast from one building to another at the end of a lecture by George Fisk given on the new medium to the Royal Society of NSW on August 19, 1919.

The radio during the 1930-1945 during the great depression meant that jobless americans could tune-in for relief and psychological support.

Franklin D. Roosevelt's "fireside chats" became enormously successful and attracted more listeners than the most popular radio shows during the "Golden Age of Radio."


Orson Well's take when interviews in the 70s... Back then radio was really big and the message in the Youtube clip was incredibly powerful as everyone believed it. 

The "Golden" Age - AM Radio is still thriving. Transistors made radios smaller. New formats such as Top 40s became popular (1945-1960s). 

FM increased in popularity during the 1960s to 80s. 

1980 meant the emergence of Talk Radio (a chance to "talk back") Rise of personalities, relaxed on ownership following 1980 deregulation. More stations per owner. Emergence of satellite radio, digital broadcasts and internet streaming. 

TV

1924 - Baird (UK) - Demonstrate the transmission of transporting images over the wire. 

April 30, 1939 the NBC officially began regularly scheduled television broadcasts in New York with a broadcast of the opening of the 1939 new York World's Fair. 

In Australia... 

Television began as early as 1929 in Melbourne, and later for example 1934 in Brisbane with experimental transmissions by an experimental station. 

The first line of a television broadcast - 16 September 1956, fifty-two years ago, and Bruce Gyngell greets Sydney on a night that made history: television was now here, finally. Australians had to wait twenty years for TV ....

"Good evening, and welcome to television..." - Talking television

The Print Revolution

The revolution of the printing press was a device for applying pressure to an inked surface using moveable handset block letters resting on paper or cloth and acting to transfer the image. 

Had replaceable and moveable letters. 

The invention remained largely unchanged until 300 years later when computer control became the norm. 

Prior to Benjamin Franklin, Johannes Gutenberg (A german blacksmith) was the first in Western Europe to develop a press.

The first known press was invented in 1450. 

By 1500 there was 250 places in Europe that had presses. By 1500, 13 million books were out in circulation. 


In 1833 the US rotary printing press meant millions of copies on a page in a single day - on rolled paper. 

In 1884 the Linotype machine allowed for steam powered presses to be installed and used that meant much faster printing could be completed. 

The effects of the Printing Press

The printing press changed a few things, allowed for the mass dissemination of ideas. Print allowed readers with a low position in the social and cultural hierarchy to study religious texts for themselves. 

Marshall McLuhan told of the shift from predominantly an oral culture to print culture. He says the affects was the nature of how the human consciousness in the print represented an abstraction of thought. 

Censorship

The press standardised and preserved knowledge. The Catholic Church had an index of Prohibited Books. It was a printed catalogue of books forbidden to be read. 

Problems with information management.

There was a rise in different occupation e.g. clerks, book-keepers, notaries, public writers, postmen. 

Public Opinion 

Newspapers contributed to the rise in public opinion (first recorded in France 1750, in English in 1781)

The printed image contributed to the natural sciences of astronomy, geography and anatomy. 

Was the printing press a revolution? 

Took place over three centuries. Illiteracy - populace still emerging from the Dark Ages. Was it the agent of change or a catalyst (like TV) assisting social changes. 

Growth of the railway mean the distribution of newspapers (could reach regional areas on the day of printing)

100,000 copies a day from Lloyd's Weekly News & News of the World. 

Commercialisation

It was profitable. Bestsellers as early as 1500 - The Imitation of Christ. Advertising appeared in print - around 1650 a news paper would carry six ads on average. A hundred years later it was about 50. 

In 1792, 15 million newspapers were sold. 

If half of Boston's citizens brought a newspaper three times a week, a publisher could become a millionaire. 

The power of news

Censorship followed. Cromwell after the beheading of King Charles 1, tried to suppress the newsheets but failed. 

During the Civil Ware in 1642 news became known as propaganda.

The Journalist

The word came into use in 1693. Daniel Defoe is considered the world's first journalist. The earliest journalists were called 'runner patterers' - They would run from thte courthouse or gallows to the newspapers offices with 'true confessions' from the condemned.

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