Results for ' news broadcast'

884 found
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  1.  14
    The Voice of Authority: The Local Accomplishment of Authoritative Discourse in Live News Broadcasts.Geoffrey Raymond - 2000 - Discourse Studies 2 (3):354-379.
    Ever since language has been examined as a vehicle for action, scholars have been interested in its authorized use. Typically described under the rubric of `felicity conditions', the authorized use of language involves, among other conditions, the right or authority of a member to engage in, or deploy, some named action. This paper begins by examining how participants authorize the discourse of a co-interactant in one specialized setting: a live news broadcast. I argue that the successful exploitation by (...)
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  2.  22
    Space and legitimation: The multimodal representation of public space in news broadcast reports on Hooded Rioters.Camila Cárdenas-Neira & Carolina Pérez-Arredondo - 2019 - Discourse and Communication 13 (3):279-302.
    This article analyses the multimodal representations of public space in Chilean broadcast news reports on the figure of the hooded rioter and its alleged connections with the student movement. We seek to identify how space is constructed as a legitimation strategy in relation to the actors involved and the actions taking place across four different news broadcast pieces in the light of Multimodal Critical Discourse Analysis and Systemic Functional Linguistics. Results show that the multimodal representations of (...)
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  3.  20
    Consumption Reduction Solution of TV News Broadcast System Based on Wireless Communication Network.Haifeng Qiang - 2021 - Complexity 2021:1-13.
    At present, the news broadcast system using mobile network on the market provides the basic functions required by TV stations, but there are still many problems and shortcomings. In view of the main problems existing in the current system and combined with the actual needs of current users, this paper has preliminarily developed a news broadcast system based on 5G Live. The card frame adaptive strategy significantly improves the user experience by using gradual video frame buffering (...)
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  4.  35
    The ethical dimension of television news broadcasting.Allan Casebier - 1985 - Journal of Social Philosophy 16 (3):3-12.
  5.  56
    Broadcasting Operation Iraqi Freedom: The People Behind Cable News Ethics, Decisions, and Gender Differences.Larry W. Boone & Christine R. MacDonald - 2009 - Journal of Business Ethics 84 (S1):115-134.
    In March 2003, President Bush declared the start of Operation Iraqi Freedom, the anticipated commencement of intensive American-led military operations in Iraq. With this declaration, the media began intense coverage of military operations from the field. For the first time, viewers were able to see images of actual events. This was due to three developments: the advancement of technology allowing immediate transmission of text and images, the actual presence of journalists identified as "embedded journalists" at military sites, and the fierce (...)
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  6.  50
    Tragedies of the Broadcast Commons: Consumer Perspectives on the Ethics of Product Placement and Video News Releases.Jay Newell, Jeffrey Layne Blevins & Michael Bugeja - 2009 - Journal of Mass Media Ethics 24 (4):201-219.
    This article explores cynicism as an ethical issue associated with the blurring of content and advertising in mass media. From a communitarian perspective and adapting Hardin's (1968) metaphorical use of “commons” to the domain of broadcasting, we surveyed the attitudes of individuals toward two phenomena of media saturation (product placement and video news releases) and three constructs (cynicism directed toward government, cynicism directed toward marketers, and the individual's assessment of their marketing literacy). Respondents were highly cynical about government regulation (...)
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  7. News from the BBC, CNN and Al-Jazeera. How the Three Broadcasters Cover the Middle East.[author unknown] - 2009
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  8.  2
    Best practices for television journalists: a handbook for reporters, producers, videographers, news directors and other broadcast professionals on how to be fair to the public.Av Westin - 2000 - Arlington, VA: Freedom Forum.
    A handbook of best practices for television and broadcast journalists, encouraging practices that the public will see as being fair, thereby helping assure that television news gathering remains free.
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  9.  24
    Should News on Child Homicides Be Broadcast? Opinions of Parents, Teachers, and Children.Allerd L. Peeters, Juliette H. Walma van der Molen & Patti M. Valkenburg - 2001 - Communications 26 (3):229-246.
  10. Mocking the News: How The Daily Show with Jon Stewart Holds Traditional Broadcast News Accountable.Chad Painter & Louis Hodges - 2010 - Journal of Mass Media Ethics 25 (4):257-274.
    The purpose of this study is to see how Jon Stewart and his Daily Show colleagues hold traditional broadcast media accountable. This paper suggests Stewart is holding those who claim they are practicing journalism accountable to the public they claim to serve and outlines the normative implications of that accountability. There is a journalistic norm that media practitioners, and the media as a whole, should be accountable to the public. Here, accountability “refers to the process by which media are (...)
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  11.  23
    The Fairness of the News Frame in Public Broadcasting Systems after Candlelight Revolution : Focusing on the reports of public broadcasting systems like MBC regarding ‘collusion between prosecution and media’.Moon-Hwan Kim - 2020 - Episteme 24:123-147.
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  12.  8
    Minding Their Own Business: Broadcast Network News Coverage of the Telecommunications Act of 1996.Rolf T. Wigand & James L. McQuivey - 1998 - Communications 23 (2):175-188.
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  13.  16
    Stylization, Authenticity and TV News Review.Nikolas Coupland - 2001 - Discourse Studies 3 (4):413-442.
    Mainstream news broadcasting pursues an authentication project, to bolster its claims to serious, weighty and factual news reporting. News review contributes to this project when it seeks to humanize front-stage news personnel. It moves away from the traditional, institutionalized concern with `authenticity-from-above' and works to generate `authenticity-from-below'. As an extreme instance of resistance to the `from-above' formulation, this article considers data from a televised UK weekday morning show, The Big Breakfast, and specifically its `review of the (...)
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  14.  50
    Ellis S. Krauss Broadcasting Politics in Japan: NHK and Television News, Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2000.Ken'ichi Ikeda - 2001 - Japanese Journal of Political Science 2 (2):257-271.
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  15.  11
    Berlusconi on Berlusconi? An analysis of digital terrestrial television coverage on commercial broadcast news in Italy.Cinzia Padovani - 2012 - Discourse and Communication 6 (4):423-447.
    This article examines how Italian commercial broadcast news on Mediaset’s three terrestrial channels has covered the transition to digital terrestrial television. Mediaset is the largest commercial broadcaster in the country and is owned by former prime minister Silvio Berlusconi. By drawing on critical discourse analysis of broadcast news, it is argued that linguistic elements such as pronouns, choice of words, and metaphors, together with tendentious editing and framing of interviews, were part of a strategy of positive (...)
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  16.  7
    Book review: Leon Barkho, News from the BBC, CNN and Al-Jazeera. How the Three Broadcasters Cover the Middle East. [REVIEW]Geert Jacobs & Tom Bruyer - 2012 - Discourse and Communication 6 (1):129-132.
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  17.  24
    Politics in the news: Do campaigns matter? A comparison of political news during election periods and routine periods in Flanders.Knut De Swert & Peter van Aelst - 2009 - Communications 34 (2):149-168.
    Can an election campaign be considered a normal time period, or is it a very exceptional episode in the way the media look at political actors and issues? This is the central question of this article. We claim that during campaigns journalists work under different conditions and are confronted with politicians and parties that are more active than ever, and with a public that pays more attention to who and how politics is presented. This general claim is made concrete in (...)
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  18.  18
    Special issue on personalization in the broadcast news interview.Martin Montgomery & Joanna Thornborrow - 2010 - Discourse and Communication 4 (2):99-104.
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  19.  18
    Television news, narrative conventions and national imagination.Miloš Pankov, Veronika Bajt & Sabina Mihelj - 2009 - Discourse and Communication 3 (1):57-78.
    By and large, contemporary news stories are stories about a particular nation, told to an audience that is seen and addressed in national terms. However, the understanding of the exact ways in which national imagination becomes engrained in the narrative conventions of news reporting is still rather limited, in particular when it comes to audiovisual genres. This article aims to fill a part of this blank by examining the links between national imagination and the narrative conventions of television (...)
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  20.  5
    Precontextualization and the rhetoric of futurity: Foretelling Colin Powell’s UN address on NBC News.John Oddo - 2013 - Discourse and Communication 7 (1):25-53.
    This article examines precontextualization: the rhetorical act of previewing and contextualizing a future discursive event. I examine how an NBC News broadcast selected verbal–visual representations of the past in order to enact a context for an upcoming discourse moment: Colin Powell’s 2003 United Nations address. The article draws on appraisal analysis, multimodal video analysis and scholarship on the rhetoric of futurity. I show that the NBC journalists who precontextualized Powell’s address on the night before its delivery presented viewers (...)
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  21.  26
    An Analysis of Korean News Media on Sustainability in the Anthropocene.Aigerim Belyalova & Natalya Yem - 2023 - Cultura 20 (1):163-175.
    The fast levels of industrialization, urbanization, globalization, and expansion of mass consumption that most countries in the world are experiencing today have led to environmental destruction and climate change, eventually threatening the survival of the Earth and humanity. Especially in the case of South Korea, where per capita greenhouse gas emissions have risen to the third highest in the world, there is an urgent need to raise public awareness of the risks of climate change and initiate a more active societal (...)
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  22.  23
    National voice: A discourse analysis of China Central Television’s News Simulcast.Debing Feng - 2013 - Discourse and Communication 7 (3):255-273.
    News Simulcast, the flagship news program for China Central Television, has been widely studied by Chinese scholars. However, little attention has been paid to its representation of ideological meanings. To address this issue, the present study, drawing upon Van Dijk’s framework of three-level analysis of discourse structure, carries out a comprehensive discourse analysis of the news broadcast on this program. A corpus of 10 episodes of News Simulcast was selected as the database, from which a (...)
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  23.  11
    Why children’s news matters: The case of CBBC Newsround in the UK.Máire Messenger Davies, Jeanette Steemers & Cynthia Carter - 2021 - Communications 46 (3):352-372.
    There has never been a greater need for reliable, truthful news to help citizens navigate and assess the veracity of what they are reading and viewing, especially on social media. Widespread concerns around ‘fake’ news demonstrate an enduring requirement for curated and trustworthy children’s news that addresses children as young citizens with certain rights. Drawing on recent UK events, we discuss the case for children’s news provision by public service broadcasting from a communication rights perspective by (...)
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  24.  25
    Address terms in the service of other actions: The case of news interview talk.Steven E. Clayman - 2010 - Discourse and Communication 4 (2):161-183.
    In broadcast news interviews, interviewees will occasionally address the interviewer by name. As a method of establishing the directionality of talk, address terms are redundant in this institutional context because the normative question/answer activity structure and associated participation framework make the direction of address transparent and knowable in advance. But address terms can be deployed in the service of a variety of actions beyond addressing per se. Some of these involve disaligning actions such as topic shifts, non-conforming responses, (...)
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  25.  12
    Political interviews in public television and commercial broadcasters: A comparison.Carles Roca-Cuberes - 2014 - Discourse and Communication 8 (2):155-179.
    In this article I examine the differences between broadcast political interviews in commercial and public service broadcasters in Spain. The study focuses in particular on political interviews broadcast on ‘morning show’ type programmes. The analysis distinguishes the characteristics that make up the news interview turn-taking system in order to explore the degree to which information and entertainment come together in political interviews broadcast on morning shows. The results show, primarily, that political interviews shown on public service (...)
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  26.  20
    Icing on the Cake: “Amplification Effect” of Innovative Information Form in News Reports About COVID-19.Fangfang Wen, Hanxue Ye, Yang Wang, Yian Xu & Bin Zuo - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    In the information era, the instant and diversified broadcasting of the COVID-19 pandemic has played an important role in stabilizing the societal mental state and avoiding inter-group conflicts. The presentation of visual graphics was considered as an innovative information form and broadly utilized in news reports. However, its effects on the audiences' cognition and behaviors have received little empirical attention. The current study applied real-time and retrospective priming paradigms to examine the impacts of information framing (positive vs. negative) and (...)
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  27.  29
    Upset with the refugee policy: Exploring the relations between policy malaise, media use, trust in news media, and issue fatigue.Jens Wolling, Christina Schumann & Dorothee Arlt - 2020 - Communications 45 (s1):624-647.
    In this paper, we introduce the concept of policy malaise, which refers to citizens’ dissatisfaction with the way political institutions and processes handle specific problems such as the refugee issue in Germany. Based on a representative online panel survey with two waves conducted in 2016 and 2017 (N = 836), we explore the occurrence of policy malaise among the German population and its relation to issue-specific media use, trust in news media, and issue fatigue. First, the results indicate that (...)
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  28.  19
    Reaching God speed: unlocking the secret broadcast revealing the mystery of everything.Joe Kovacs - 2022 - New York: Fidelis Books.
    The answer is surprising, and what we're about to learn will wake us up to a reality most of us never knew existed.The reason we're so oblivious is because we've all been operating at human speed, relying on our own physical power and our five senses. But there is something extremely important we've all been missing. It holds the key to everything good--the key to life, success, happiness, peace of mind, and understanding beyond our wildest imagination. It's perhaps the best-kept (...)
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  29.  33
    Politicizing the Pandemic: A Schemata Analysis of COVID-19 News in Two Selected Newspapers.Ali Haif Abbas - 2022 - International Journal for the Semiotics of Law - Revue Internationale de Sémiotique Juridique 35 (3):883-902.
    This article critically studies coronavirus pandemic news in the press. The article attempts to study the way the news of COVID-19 is used for political and ideological purposes. In order to achieve the aim, two newspapers namely, The New York Times from the United States of America and Global Times from China are selected. Van Dijk’s news schemata framework is used for the analysis of the reports selected from the two newspapers. Van Dijk’s news schemata is (...)
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  30.  19
    The discursive construction of a news event: Access and legitimation in the media framing of an escalated anti-asylum protest in Belgium.Priscilla Hau, Steve Paulussen & Pieter Maeseele - 2025 - Communications 50 (1):130-148.
    In October 2019, the Belgian government announced the opening of an asylum center in a former retirement home, leading to civic and political protest that escalated into arson. We examine the construction of the events before, on, and after the arson by analyzing 135 articles from Flemish newspapers, the public broadcaster’s news website, and alternative media between October 25 and November 30, 2019 using qualitative content analysis. Our analysis emphasizes journalists’ role as gatekeepers, deciding which actors get access and (...)
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  31.  9
    Mixed Signals: The Prospects for Global Television News.Richard Parker - 1995 - Twentieth Century Foundation.
    In this volume, Richard Parker contemplates the opposing interests of the developing global market television industry and the future of entertainment programming trying to appeal to the local tastes. The author also presents the basic economics of television and how this understanding will enhance the dissemination of news and we as an audience will take this even more for granted.
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  32.  32
    “Not how much, but how.” Contextualizing the presentation of violence broadcast on television: Normativity and narrative genres.Concepción Fernández-Villanueva, María Celeste Dávila & Juan Carlos Revilla - 2021 - Communications 46 (1):4-26.
    The analysis of TV violence cannot be limited to the quantification of its incidence, but should also take into account the type of violence broadcast and its context (what is depicted and how). Thus, normative models of violence (legitimized violence with positive consequences for the aggressor, or vice versa) could be understood as positive, while contra-normative models of violence (rewarding illegitimate violence and punishing legitimate violence) should be of far greater concern. This paper analyzes the normative contexts of TV (...)
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  33.  20
    (1 other version)The ethical journalist: making responsible decisions in the pursuit of news.Gene Foreman - 2010 - Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell.
    The Ethical Journalist gives aspiring journalists the tools they need to make responsible professional decisions. Provides a foundation in applied ethics in journalism Examines the subject areas where ethical questions most frequently arise in modern practice Incorporates the views of distinguished print, broadcast and online journalists, exploring such critical issues as race, sex, and the digitalization of news sources Illustrated with 24 real-life case studies that demonstrate how to think in 'shades of gray' rather than 'black and white' (...)
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  34.  37
    Ethics in all-news radio: Perceptions of news directors.K. Tim Wulfemeyer - 1990 - Journal of Mass Media Ethics 5 (3):178 – 190.
    In order for a new code of behavior, such as the 1987 Code of Broadcast News Ethics of the Radio-Television News Directors Association (RTNDA) to work, member support and voluntary compliance is necessary. This study shows all-news radio news directors seem generally inclined to support the Code except in areas in which long-time journalistic conventions are involved.
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  35.  16
    ‘Going public’: constructing the personal in a television news interview.Joanna Thornborrow - 2010 - Discourse and Communication 4 (2):105-123.
    In this article I examine how a ‘private’, inside story was constructed through an extended news interview drawing on models of both the experiential and the accountable broadcast interview. The analysis, based on aspects of adjacency sequencing, question/ response design, and narrative organization, explores the ways in which a personal account is elicited about an event that had been highly prominent in the news. However, I also look at how ‘accountability’ emerges as an issue during the interview, (...)
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  36.  14
    Rituals of personal experience in television news interviews.Martin Montgomery - 2010 - Discourse and Communication 4 (2):185-211.
    Interviewing as part of broadcast news includes a wide range of practices that go beyond calling public figures to account in ways that have received so much attention and analysis in the research literature. This article examines a major strand of news interviewing which it identifies as ‘experiential’ and argues, on the basis of close discourse analysis of interviews drawn from coverage of the 2008 Beijing Olympics and the 2005 London bombings, that the focus on personal experience (...)
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  37.  8
    Natural selection: Empiricist discourse in the talk of broadcast journalists.Sally Reardon - 2018 - Discourse and Communication 12 (1):80-98.
    Journalists are frequently used as a source of information for those studying news production and practice and as a means of describing the ‘real’ world of news. However, these conversations between researcher and journalist have often largely been treated as a transfer of neutral, transparent information about news practice rather than a discursive practice in itself. Discourse analysis has been extensively applied to the output of news, yet is underdeveloped in the area of production studies. This (...)
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  38.  8
    ‘Coming up next’: The discourse of television news headlines.Debing Feng & Martin Montgomery - 2016 - Discourse and Communication 10 (5):500-520.
    Despite the adoption of the term headline for both print news and broadcast news, their roles in the different media are not the same. Print headlines are mostly contiguous with the story to which they refer. Broadcast headlines, however, are often at some temporal distance from their associated news item. In the print medium every story carries a headline. In broadcast news only some items are headlined. And yet, whereas the linguistic properties of (...)
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  39.  12
    The disaffiliative use of ‘did you know’ questions in Arabic news interviews: The case of Aljazeera’s ‘The Opposite Direction’.Dana Shalash - 2020 - Discourse Studies 22 (5):590-609.
    This article studies the use of ‘hal taʔlaam’ questions by the interviewer as a discursive strategy to block the interviewees’ agenda and stance in Aljazeera’s ‘The Opposite Direction’, a weekly news interview program that broadcasts live in Arabic on Aljazeera. The show has been on the air since Aljazeera’s inception, in the mid 1990s. The show hosts two guests with opposing political views, who are pitted against each other in a heated discussion as they represent and defend their own (...)
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  40.  18
    The construction of paradoxes in news discourse: The coverage of the Israeli Haredi community as a case in point.Pnina Shukrun-Nagar - 2013 - Discourse Studies 15 (4):463-480.
    This article focuses on the construction of two types of non-logical paradoxes in news discourse: 1) inconsistencies of positions and acts; 2) conflicts between reality and expectations or common sense. I will argue that these paradoxes are constructed by various discursive devices and will demonstrate the key role played by conventional and conversational implicatures in this regard. The discussion will focus on 23 items covering disputes between ultra-Orthodox and secular Jews, broadcast on mainstream Israeli television news in (...)
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  41. The Daily Show and Philosophy: Moments of Zen in the Art of Fake News.Jason Holt (ed.) - 2009 - Wiley-Blackwell.
    An entertaining and insightful examination of the Emmy-award winning American satirical news show, broadcast on Comedy Central in the US, and on More4 in the UK and CNN International around the world. Includes discussion of both _The Daily Show_ and its spin-off show, _The Colbert Report_ Showcases philosophers at their best, discussing truth, knowledge, reality and the American Way Highlights the razor sharp critical skills of Jon Stewart and his colleagues Faces tough and surprisingly funny questions about politics, (...)
     
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  42.  15
    Question design and the construction of populist stances in political news interviews.Marianna Patrona, Mats Ekström & Joanna Thornborrow - 2021 - Discourse and Communication 15 (6):672-689.
    This paper focuses on the relationship between journalism and right wing populist discourses in the context of broadcast news interviews. We analyse a specific feature of question design in which the public is invoked as a source of opinionated positions in adversarial interviewing. Analysing data from a range of socio-political contexts, we identify a shift in adversarial questioning along a scale of ‘soft’ populism, that is the attribution of views and concerns to a generic public ‘in crisis’, to (...)
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  43.  21
    Recontextualizing participatory journalists’ mobile media in British television news: A case study of the live coverage and commemorations of the 2005 London bombings.Annie Bryan & Nuria Lorenzo-Dus - 2011 - Discourse and Communication 5 (1):23-40.
    This article examines contributions from members of the public featured in British television news coverage of the 2005 London bombings. Specifically, it explores how images captured by ordinary people on their mobile devices were used in the live news reportage of 7/7 and, given the current salience of commemorative journalism, how these were used in the tragedy’s first year anniversary coverage. The analysis reveals broadcasters’ selection of uniform, repetitive and ‘sanitized’ mobile media footage, as well as a tendency (...)
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  44.  18
    ‘I think it's absolutely exorbitant!’: how UK television news reported the shareholder vote on executive remuneration at Barclays in 2012.Richard Thomas - 2016 - Critical Discourse Studies 13 (1):94-117.
    ABSTRACTThe most publicised rebellion during the so-called ‘Shareholder Spring’ of 2012 was at Barclays PLC. Using multi-modal and critical discourse analysis, this paper examines how three UK television channels with different public service obligations covered this story on 27 April 2012. It finds that broadcasters’ regulatory obligations do not obviously impact content and that, for example, simple reporting routines contain judgemental phrases. Generally, the multi-dimensional nature of executive pay is simplified and the real balance between private and individual shareholders is (...)
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  45.  48
    Searching for the Ethical Journalist: An Exploratory Study of the Moral Development of News Workers.Lee Wilkins & Renita Coleman - 2002 - Journal of Mass Media Ethics 17 (3):209-225.
    This study gathered preliminary baseline data on the moral development of journalists using the Defining Issues Test, an instrument based on Kohlberg's 6 stages. Results show that a sample of journalists scored 4th highest among professionals tested using the DIT. The journalists ranked behind seminarians/philosophers, medical students, and physicians but above dental students, nurses, graduate students, undergraduate college students, veterinary students, and adults in general. No significant differences were found between various groups of journalists, including men and women, and (...) and print journalists. The journalists in the study scored significantly higher on the 3 journalism-specific dilemmas than on 3 nonjournalism dilemmas. (shrink)
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  46.  19
    Mediation between discourse and society: assessing cognitive approaches in CDA.Ruth Wodak - 2006 - Discourse Studies 8 (1):179-190.
    While reviewing relevant recent research, it becomes apparent that cognitive approaches have been rejected and excluded from Critical Discourse Analysis by many scholars out of often unjustified reasons. This article argues, in contrast, that studies in CDA would gain significantly through integrating insights from socio-cognitive theories into their framework. Examples from my own research into the comprehension and comprehensibility of news broadcasts, Internet discussion boards as well as into discourse and discrimination illustrate this position. However, I also argue that (...)
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  47.  20
    ‘Cropped out’: The collaborative production of an accusation of racism.Daniella Rafaely - 2021 - Discourse Studies 23 (3):324-338.
    This article utilises the concept of ‘race trouble’ as an overarching framework for examining an interview between Ms Vanessa Nakate and a South African news broadcaster. The interview describes an incident involving Ms Nakate’s attendance at a global climate change conference and her exclusion from a media report about a press briefing that she held along with four other youth activists at the conference. The analysis focuses on the collaborative and interactional production of Ms Nakate’s claim that her exclusion (...)
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  48.  18
    L'action audiovisuelle extérieure de la France.Thierry Lancien - 2004 - Hermes 40:121.
    L'examen de la politique audiovisuelle extérieure de la France en matière de télévision, de 1984 à aujourd'hui, permet de constater que celle-ci a été relativement stable, notamment à travers le développement de la chaîne TV5. Après avoir souligné que la création de cette chaîne s'inscrit dans une vision très culturelle de la diffusion audiovisuelle, nous montrons qu'elle entretient des rapports ambigus avec la question francophone en matière de public, de programmes et de langue. Le cas de l'information, ensuite envisagé, est (...)
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  49.  9
    ‘Can women have it all?’ Transitions in media representations of Jacinda Ardern’s leadership and identity by a global newsroom.Małgorzata Chałupnik, Jai Mackenzie, Louise Mullany & Sara Vilar-Lluch - forthcoming - Critical Discourse Studies.
    The paper examines changing media representations of Jacinda Ardern, former Aotearoa New Zealand Prime Minister, from the global broadcaster, BBC News Online, across three key milestones in the politician’s career: her appointment, re-election and resignation. Our socio-semantic analysis of this representation demonstrates how the media intersect her professional identity with age, gender, social class, and later, her identity as a mother. Whilst earlier coverage of Ardern’s career praises her successfully reconciling these aspects of her personal, social and professional identities, (...)
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  50.  33
    Journalism Ethics and Regulation.Chris Frost - 2010 - New York, NY: Pearson.
    What are ethics? -- News : towards a definition -- Morality of reporting -- The good journalist -- Truth, accuracy, objectivity and trust -- Privacy and intrusion -- Reputation -- Gathering the news -- Reporting the vulnerable -- Deciding what to publish -- Taste and decency : harm and offence -- Professional practice -- Regulation -- History of print regulation -- History of broadcast regulation -- Codes of conduct as a regulatory system -- Press regulation systems in (...)
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