terms from ch. 14,10,9,8,3,4,7
Quiz yourself by thinking what should be in
each of the black spaces below before clicking
on it to display the answer.
Help!
|
|
||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
show | Information most worthy of transformation into news stories
🗑
|
||||
T I P C U P | show 🗑
|
||||
News | show 🗑
|
||||
Ethnocentrism | show 🗑
|
||||
show | Journalists sometimes naively assume that businesspeople compete with one another not to primarily maximize profits but 'to create a increased prosperity for all.'
🗑
|
||||
show | favoring the small over the large the rural over the urban. small-towns = innocence, large cities = equal problems with government, urban experiences, etc...
🗑
|
||||
Individualism | show 🗑
|
||||
Absolute Ethics | show 🗑
|
||||
Situational Ethics | show 🗑
|
||||
Conflict of Interest | show 🗑
|
||||
show | Do unto others as you would have them do unto you.
🗑
|
||||
Categorical Imperative | show 🗑
|
||||
show | 'the greatest good for the greatest number'
🗑
|
||||
Herd Journalism | show 🗑
|
||||
show | The moment when the reporter nabs 'the bad guy' or the wrongdoer.
🗑
|
||||
show | A group of TV stories that recount the worst criminal transgressions of the day.
🗑
|
||||
show | The part of a broadcast news report in which an expert, celebrity, victim, or person-on-the-street responds in an interview to some aspect of an event or issue.
🗑
|
||||
Happy Talk | show 🗑
|
||||
News Photographers | show 🗑
|
||||
show | Emphasizes describing events and issues from a seemingly neutral point of view.
🗑
|
||||
show | Stresses analyzing occurrences and advocating remedies from an acknowledged point of view.
🗑
|
||||
Public Journalism | show 🗑
|
||||
show | Having elected officials act on our behalf.
🗑
|
||||
Deliberative Democracy | show 🗑
|
||||
show | A style of reporting in which Journalists assume that leaders are hiding something.
Criticisms: Fosters cynicism among journalists.
🗑
|
||||
News Consultant/News Doctor | show 🗑
|
||||
Consequence | show 🗑
|
||||
Attributes Required to win Pulitzer Prize | show 🗑
|
||||
show | Believed that the mountains of data in modern life add to our problems instead of engendering thoughtful discussion among citizens.
🗑
|
||||
show | Going beyond 'telling the news' to try to help public life go well.
Going beyond only describing what is 'going wrong' to imagining what 'going right' would be like.
Going from seeing people as consumers to seeing them as participants in a democratic pu
🗑
|
||||
Herbert Gans | show 🗑
|
||||
show | Made from plant reeds found along the Nile river; used to write on, rolled into scrolls.
🗑
|
||||
Parchment | show 🗑
|
||||
show | A type of book cut into sheets of parchment and sewn together along the edge, then bound with thin pieces of wood and covered with leather.
🗑
|
||||
Manuscript Culture | show 🗑
|
||||
show | Wrote most of the books of this period; Monks and Priests.
🗑
|
||||
show | Decorative, colorful designs and illustrations on each page.
🗑
|
||||
Block Printing | show 🗑
|
||||
Vellum | show 🗑
|
||||
show | 1830s, made with cheaper paper covers had been introduced in the US from Europe.
🗑
|
||||
show | Sold for five or ten cents; 1860, Erastus and Irwin Beadle.
🗑
|
||||
Pulp Fiction | show 🗑
|
||||
show | Enabled printers to set type mechanically using a typewriter-style keyboard; 1880s.
🗑
|
||||
show | Early 1900s, allowed books to be printed from photographic plates rather than metal casts; reduced cost of color and illustrations; led to computerized typesetting.
🗑
|
||||
show | companies that tried to identify and produce the works of good writers.
🗑
|
||||
show | include hardbound and paperback books aimed at general readers and sold at various retail outlets; adult- fiction, nonfiction, biographies, lit classics, books on hobbies, art, pop science, technology, cookbooks; Juvenile- preschool picture books, young-a
🗑
|
||||
Profession Books | show 🗑
|
||||
show | books made for the elementary and high school and college markets.
🗑
|
||||
show | sold off racks in drugstores, supermarkets, airports; represent largest segment of the industry in terms of units sold, generate less revenue than trade books b/c low priced.
🗑
|
||||
show | a marketing strategy that involves publishing a topical book quickly after a major event occurs.
🗑
|
||||
Copyright law of 1891 | show 🗑
|
||||
Extra | show 🗑
|
||||
Magazine | show 🗑
|
||||
show | assigned magazines lower postage rates and put them on an equal footing with newspapers delivered by mail.
🗑
|
||||
Cookie and Pattern Publications | show 🗑
|
||||
Yellow Journalism | show 🗑
|
||||
Muckraking | show 🗑
|
||||
General Interest Magazines | show 🗑
|
||||
Photojournalism | show 🗑
|
||||
show | the total number of people who come into contact with a single copy of a magazine.
🗑
|
||||
Life Magazine | show 🗑
|
||||
Regional Editions | show 🗑
|
||||
show | tailor advertisements to different geographic areas.
🗑
|
||||
show | Target particular groups of consumers
🗑
|
||||
Movies | show 🗑
|
||||
Radio | show 🗑
|
||||
show | elite readers who were served mainly by non-mass market political and literary magazines; Appealed to formally educated readers who shared political ideas, aesthetic concerns, or social values.
🗑
|
||||
Jet | show 🗑
|
||||
Supermarket Tabloids | show 🗑
|
||||
Webzines | show 🗑
|
||||
Youth's Companion | show 🗑
|
||||
Reader's Digest | show 🗑
|
||||
show | defaming a public official’s character in print.
🗑
|
||||
show | Right of a democratic press to criticize public officials
🗑
|
||||
show | political papers; pushed the plan of the particular political group that subsidized the paper.
🗑
|
||||
show | 1830s, newspapers dropped price to one cent; papers now cheaper and more affordable; led newspaper to become mass medium.
🗑
|
||||
Human Interest Stories | show 🗑
|
||||
show | the first major news wire service; founded by 6 NY newspapers; provided access to both their own stories and those from other newspapers.
🗑
|
||||
show | began as commercial organizations that relayed news stories and information around the country and the world using telegraph lines and later radio waves and digital transmissions
🗑
|
||||
Yellow Journalism | show 🗑
|
||||
show | Joseph Pulitzer; 1883; had advice columns, women's pages, crime, sex, and cannibalism; department store ads.
🗑
|
||||
show | An informational paper that provided stock and real estate reports to businesses, court reports to legal professionals, treaty summaries to political leaders, and theater and books reviews to intellectuals; Adolph Ochs, 1896.
🗑
|
||||
show | distinguishes factual reports from opinion columns, modern reporters strive to maintain a neutral attitude toward the issue or event they cover; also search out competing viewpoints among sources for a story.
🗑
|
||||
show | news reports begin with the most dramatic or newsworthy info- answering who what where and when questions- and then tail off with less important details; stripped of adverbs and adjectives.
🗑
|
||||
Interpretive Journalism | show 🗑
|
||||
Precision Journalism | show 🗑
|
||||
show | an approach in which the reporter actively promotes a particular cause or viewpoint
🗑
|
||||
Literary Journalism | show 🗑
|
||||
Columbus Dispatch | show 🗑
|
||||
show | carrying articles on local schools, social events, town government, property crimes, and zoning issues; foster a sense of community; small town newspapers.
🗑
|
||||
Conflict Oriented Journalism | show 🗑
|
||||
Underground Press | show 🗑
|
||||
Pop Music | show 🗑
|
||||
show | used to describe the way that quickly produced tunes supposedly sounded like cheap pans clanging together.
🗑
|
||||
Jazz | show 🗑
|
||||
Cover Music | show 🗑
|
||||
show | 1950s, combined the vocal and instrumental traditions of popular music with the rhythms and blues sounds of Memphis and the country beat of Nashville; integrationist music.
🗑
|
||||
Blues | show 🗑
|
||||
Rhythm & Blues (R&B) | show 🗑
|
||||
Brown vs. Board of Education | show 🗑
|
||||
show | rock and roll performer; pompadour hairdo, Steinway piano, first drag queen, blurred boundaries between masculinity and femininity
🗑
|
||||
show | country/hillbilly music combined with southern gospel and Mississippi delta blues
🗑
|
||||
show | the practice of record promoters paying deejays or radio programmers to play particular songs.
🗑
|
||||
show | mid 1970s, challenged orthodoxy and commercialism of the record business; loud, unpolished distortions, a jackhammer beat.
🗑
|
||||
show | describes many types of experimental rock music that offered a departure from the theatrics and staged extravaganzas of 1970s glam rock.
🗑
|
||||
show | music that combines spoken street dialect with cuts or samples from older records and bears the influences of social politics, male swagger, and comic lyrics from the blues, R&B, soul and rock and roll.
🗑
|
||||
show | developed in LA in 1987, partly in response to drug-related news stories that represented a one sided portrait of life in urban America.
🗑
|
||||
show | an independent US government agency charged with regulating interstate and international communications by radio, television, wire, satellite, and cable.
🗑
|
||||
show | 1927, oversee radio licenses and negotiate channel problems
🗑
|
||||
show | licensees do not own their channels but could license them as long as they operated to serve the ‘public interest, convenience, or necessity’
🗑
|
||||
show | involves up front payments from record companies to radio stations to play a song a specific number of times.
🗑
|
||||
Drive Time | show 🗑
|
||||
News/Talk Format | show 🗑
|
||||
Adult Contemporary | show 🗑
|
||||
show | top 40 radio
🗑
|
||||
Country | show 🗑
|
||||
show | one of radio’s most popular formats, primarily targeting African American listeners in urban areas with dance, R&B, and hip-hop music.
🗑
|
||||
show | the radio music format that features album cuts from mainstream rock bands.
🗑
|
||||
show | the sweeping update of telecommunications law that led to a wave of media consolidation.
🗑
|
Review the information in the table. When you are ready to quiz yourself you can hide individual columns or the entire table. Then you can click on the empty cells to reveal the answer. Try to recall what will be displayed before clicking the empty cell.
To hide a column, click on the column name.
To hide the entire table, click on the "Hide All" button.
You may also shuffle the rows of the table by clicking on the "Shuffle" button.
Or sort by any of the columns using the down arrow next to any column heading.
If you know all the data on any row, you can temporarily remove it by tapping the trash can to the right of the row.
To hide a column, click on the column name.
To hide the entire table, click on the "Hide All" button.
You may also shuffle the rows of the table by clicking on the "Shuffle" button.
Or sort by any of the columns using the down arrow next to any column heading.
If you know all the data on any row, you can temporarily remove it by tapping the trash can to the right of the row.
Embed Code - If you would like this activity on your web page, copy the script below and paste it into your web page.
Normal Size Small Size show me how
Normal Size Small Size show me how
Created by:
eva786