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Amusing Ourselves to Death: Public Discourse in the Age of Show Business by Neil Postman |
Media Unlimited, Revised Edition: How the Torrent of Images and Sounds Overwhelms Our Lives by Todd Gitlin
$11.70
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Bad News : The Decline of Reporting, the Business of News, and the Danger to Us All by Tom Fenton |
Froth and Scum: Truth, Beauty, Goodness, and the Ax Murder in America's First Mass Medium by Andie Tucher
$21.95
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The Sociology of News (Contemporary Sociology) by Michael Schudson
$17.50
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"This is a book told by a journalistic idealist that is full of sound and fury, signifying something truly important. To understand why journalism too often falls short, and why this failure is costly, read this searing book"
--Ken Auletta, media critic, New Yorker magazine; author, Backstory: Inside the Business of News
“News Flash is more frightening than a Stephen King novel. It meticulously chronicles how ou r nation’s television news has morphed into brazen show biz, how good journalism fell victim to good looks, how serving public interest gave way to placating corporate greed. This is a riveting account by a veteran television reporter and network executive who watched it all happen from the inside. Bonnie Anderson exposes the shameful way that network executives routinely give token attention to ethnic, racial and gender diversity yet quietly keep white males in virtual control of the key jobs in television news. All the while, our evening news programs blissfully--and arrogantly¾ignore the information needs of a rapidly changing America.”
--Juan Gonzalez, columnist, New York Daily News; president, The National Association of Hispanic Journalists
“My grandmother always said, ‘When you know better, you ought to do better.’ In News Flash, Bonnie Anderson shows us a better way. Thanks, Bonnie.”
--Tavis Smiley, author and PBS and NPR talk show host
Product Description
While talking heads debate the media’s alleged conservative or liberal bias, award-winning journalist Bonnie Anderson knows that the problem with television news isn’t about the Left versus the Right-- it’s all about the money. From illegal hiring practices to ethnocentric coverage to political cheerleading, News Flash exposes how American broadcast conglomerates’ pursuit of the almighty dollar consistently trumps the need for fair and objective reporting. Along the way to the bottomline, the proud tradition of American television journalism has given way to an entertainment-driven industry that’s losing credibility and viewers by the day.
As someone who has worked as both a broadcast reporter and a network executive, Anderson details how the networks have been co-opted by bottom-line thinking that places more value on a telegenic face than on substantive reporting. Network executives—the real power in broadcast journalism—are increasingly employing tactics and strategies from the entertainment industry. They "cast" reporters based on their ability to "project credibility," value youth over training and experience, and often greenlight coverage only if they can be assured that it will appeal to advertiser-friendly demographics.
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Product Details
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