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Making News

Explore the changing landscape of news reporting and the impact of factors such as ownership, economic pressures, and technological innovations. Discover how journalism is adapting to meet the demands of a diverse and interactive audience.

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Making News

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  1. Making News

  2. Communicating news information • News reporting is a genre with its own specific characteristics • Its characteristics have evolved owing to: • The function of newspapers: i.e. reporting information on world facts and events • The particular type of relation with the readership • The limitations of the medium: • Constraints of time (the need to deliver information fast), space on the page, etc.

  3. Traditional roles in the newsroom • Chief reporter, journalist, subeditor and editorhaverather fixed roles in news-making: • The journalist writes the article • The chief reporter revises and checks the article (for factual accuracy, language, etc.) • The subeditor and editor edit the article and make decisions on the article prominence, its layout, headline and photos/pictures, its allocation in the issue, etc.

  4. How are journalism and journalists’ practices changing?

  5. Factors affecting the media industry • Ownership • Economic pressures • Technological innovations • Professionalization • Quality of journalism • Recent Changes due to: • Mergers and acquisitions • The Internet • Digitalisation • Increased media production

  6. Media ownership • Global media organizations control the majority of newspapers worldwide: • In Britain, 8 owners dominate the national press • In the US, 8 companies control the majority of the media • In the world, 6 multinational companies effectively control the leading media • ‘Alternative’ press, often with strong political, religious, ethnic affiliations • Ownership influences media content, political stance and editorial perspective

  7. Economic Pressures • The need to make profits has a major impact on media production • Advertising is a major source of profit for newspapers, hence: • The need to sell advertising space • The need to keep sales and circulation high • Meeting readers’ expectations is a way to keep sales and circulation high • Free papers and most Internet papers rely wholly on advertising to make profits

  8. New Technology Somecharacteristics of new technology • Digitalization • Server-based production • Non-linear editing • Faster production process • Automation • Products are publishable in multiple formats

  9. Effects on journalism • Fewer journalists • Less investigative journalism • The Internet is a news-gathering tool • Tighter production times • More editions during the day • More competition between different media (e.g. print and electronic)

  10. Effects on journalistic practices • Multi-skilling: • Editing, video journalism • Multimedia • Time is still a constraint: • Later deadlines but more tasks to perform • Less time for analysis • More control over the final product: • Fewer people involved • Audience feedback from interactive media

  11. Changing audiences • Audiences are no longer passive consumers • Interactivity allows audiences to voice their opinions • Audiences contribute to creating news products (videos, pictures, blogs, etc.) • Audiences have expectations about content and formats • Better educated, informed readers • More sources of information available • Less loyalty to brands

  12. A changing profession? • Journalists need to be versatile and be able to perform multiple activities • Converging forms of news products (print, audio, television, or online) • Increased workload • Lack of specialisation Leading to better journalism or a threat to the profession?

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