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The Dynamics of Mass Communication

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Title: The Dynamics of Mass Communication


1
The Dynamics ofMass Communication
Seventh Edition
  • Joseph R. Dominick

2
Part 2 The Print Media
3
Chapter 4 Newspapers
4
Newspaper HistoryJournalism in Early America
  • Early American Newspaper Characteristics
  • Few newspapers existed
  • Most publishers were printers and postmasters
  • News was not very timely
  • Colonial authority didnt support a free press

5
Noteworthy Colonial Newspapers
  • Publick Occurrences both Foreign And Domestick
  • Boston, 1690, Benjamin Harris, publisher
  • 1st American newspaper
  • Published without authority
  • Upsets local officials with scandalous story
  • Lasts only one issue

6
Noteworthy Colonial Newspapers
  • Boston News Letter
  • Boston, 1704, John Campbell, publisher
  • Published with royal permission
  • Bland, safe stories poorly received by public

7
Noteworthy Colonial Newspapers
  • New England Courant
  • James Franklin, publisher
  • pioneers idea papers dont need official approval
  • Jailed for publishing without prior authority
  • Appoints brother Ben publisher and paper thrives

8
Noteworthy Colonial Newspapers
  • Pennsylvania Gazette Ben
    Franklin, publisher
  • Proves advertising copy can sell merchandise
  • Shows journalism can be an honorable profession
  • Debuts idea of editorial cartoons
  • Greatly Improves newspaper readability
  • Easier to read type fonts
  • Use of headlines
  • Cleaner, simpler layout designs

9
The Beginnings of Revolution
  • Zenger trial truth becomes legitimate libel
    defense
  • Partisan papers support diverse political
    positions
  • 1765 Stamp Act spurs strong partisan reactions
  • Declaration of Independence widely reprinted

10
The Political Press 1790 1833
  • The Federalists Debates What is the rightful
    role and powers limits of the Federal Government?
  • First Amendment Bill of Rights ratified in1791
    guarantees freedom of the press
  • Newspaper numbers grow rapidly expensive (six
    cents) and still targeted to affluent, merchant
    class

11
Birth of the Mass NewspaperThe Penny Press
1833 1860
  • Prerequisites for mass newspapers
  • Quick, cost-efficient printing presses
  • A critical mass of literate customers

12
Significant Contributors
  • Benjamin Day, 22, starts the New York World
  • Lowers paper price from six cents to one penny
  • Content centers on sex, crime, and human interest
  • James Bennett, 1855, the New York Herald
  • Introduces financial and sports pages
  • Advocates political reform in aggressive
    editorials

13
Significant Contributors
  • Horace Greeley, 1841, starts the New York Tribune
  • Writing appeals to reader intellect rather than
    emotion
  • News and editorials center on crusades and causes
  • Henry Raymond, 1851, starts the New York Times
  • Introduces objective and reasoned journalism

14
The Penny Press changed . . .
  • The basis of a papers economic support
  • from rich subscribers to advertising aimed at a
    diverse audience
  • The pattern of distribution
  • from mail subscriptions to direct street sales
  • The way news was collected
  • thus heralding the advent of professional
    reporting
  • What news content should be
  • from the concerns of the elite class to the
    affairs of the middle
  • class. News becomes a commodity, and the
    fresher the better

15
Newspapers Become Big Business
  • The Civil War and the telegraphic dispatch system
    change the way stories are written it heralded
    the start of the lead and inverted pyramid
    formats
  • U.S. population doubles between 1870-1900, and
    circulations boast an overall fivefold increase

16
The Post Civil War Newspaper Giants
  • Joseph Pulitzer, St. Louis Post Dispatch, the New
    York World
  • Aims paper at diverse NYC audience, particularly
    immigrants
  • Stresses simple writing and generous use of
    pictures
  • Emphasizes accuracy and introduces investigative
    reporting
  • Increases ad space and ad rates based on
    circulation
  • Re-introduces penny press sensationalism into
    stories
  • Endorses idea papers should be advocates for
    public good
  • Self-promotes paper with inflated circulation
    figures

17
Post Civil War Newspaper Giants
  • E.W. Scripps, Cleveland, Cincinnati working-class
    papers
  • Promotes concisely edited news, mostly for blue
    collar workers
  • Highlights human interest stories
  • Practices editorial independence
  • Runs frequent crusades for the working class
  • Pioneers concept of chain newspapers (controls 13
    at peak)

18
Post Civil War Newspaper Giants
  • Wm. Randolph Hearst, San Francisco Examiner and
    the New York Journal. Also real-life basis for
    Citizen Kane film.
  • Relies on sensationalized news dealing with
    death, dishonor, and disaster (yellow journalism)
    to boost circulation
  • Promotes stories that appeal directly to reader
    emotion

19
Their Collective Legacy
  • Professional writing
  • Aggressive reporting
  • Investigative journalism
  • Banner headlines, pictures, and color printing
  • Injects energy and verve into American journalism

20
Early Twentieth Century
  • Overall Trends
  • Circulations and profits up
  • Number of daily and competing papers decline
  • Large increases in equipment and supply costs
  • Advertisers prefer big circulation newspapers
  • Consolidation trend grows with chain increases

21
Early Twentieth Century (Cont)
  • Jazz Journalism (1920s)
  • tabloid sized newspapers
  • lavish use of photographs
  • short, simple writing style
  • Impact of the Great Depression (1930s)
  • poor economy forces many papers to close
  • radio emerges as a serious ad competitor
  • tabloid journalism rejected
  • stories begin getting interpretive reporting spin

22
Major WWI Postwar Trends
  • Economics force a trend towards consolidation
  • Chain newspapers grow
  • Circulation fall behind population growth
  • Cities with competing papers fall to 2
  • Labor and material costs continue to rise
  • TV emerges as serious ad sales competitor

23
Contemporary Developments
  • Birth of USA Today and its influences
  • Short, easy-to-read stories
  • Splashy graphics and colors
  • Lots of graphs, charts, and tables
  • Factoids (boiled down facts, like this list)
  • Rebirth of investigative reporting (Watergate)
  • Advent of Public Journalism
  • Many papers create online editions in late 1990s

24
Newspapers in the Digital Age
  • Portals and Web Partners (welcome to our world)
  • E-Commerce (getting into online retailing)
  • Handheld Media (wireless media and PDAs)
  • Siphoning Dilemma (keeping what you already
    have)

25
Defining Features of Newspapers
  • Diverse content
  • Convenient packaging
  • Best media for local news and advertising
  • Serve as primary historical document
  • Perform key Watch Dog role for society
  • News is timely

26
Newspaper Industry Organization
  • Print dailies
  • National newspapers
  • Large metropolitan dailies
  • Suburban dailies
  • Small town dailies
  • Print weeklies

27
Print Dailies
  • Dailies continue slow decline in total numbers
  • National circulation totals continue to slide
  • circulation subscription newsstand sales
  • forms basis of advertising revenue rates
  • Ratio of readers to population continue to slide

28
National Newspapers
  • Only a handful exist
  • USA Today
  • Wall Street Journal
  • New York Times
  • Christian Science Monitor
  • Aimed at national audiences
  • Satellites send publishing info to regional
    plants

29
Large Metropolitan Dailies
  • Circulation declines continue (though
    populations up)
  • Dropping figures due in large part to
  • suburban migrations
  • increased production costs
  • increased competition from all other media
  • Alarming number of older papers continue to
    fold

30
Suburban Dailies
  • Continue to enjoy steady circulation growth
  • Profits mirror affluence of malls and
    populations
  • Metro papers fight back with zoned editions
  • Some suburban papers entering urban markets

31
Small Town Dailies (towns with 100,000 or less
populations)
  • Steady but modest circulation gains
  • Continue their role as primary local mass
    medium

32
Print Weeklies
  • Overall numbers remain relatively stable
  • about 7,900 for last 20 years
  • But circulation has doubled in same period
  • now up to 74 million
  • Slim profits make them vulnerable to rising
    costs

33
The Effort to Recapture Readers
Tactics and Trends
  • Better eye appeal vivid colors and splashy
    graphics
  • Writing style shorter stories, summaries,
    and sidebars
  • Content more lifestyle and utilitarian
    stories
  • Editorial emphasis on the under-35 audience

34
Special-Service and Minority
Newspapers
  • African-American press declining
  • focus shifts to local news and upscale readers
  • Spanish press growing rapidly
  • some mainline papers now offer Spanish editions
  • College press strong, becoming attractive
    market

35
Newspapers Online
  • The big difference between online and print
    papers revolves around distribution methods
    rather than news functions
  • Advantages of Online Papers
  • No limits on story length or number of pictures
  • Can be continually, easily, and inexpensively
    updated
  • Offers readers several ways to interact online

36
  • Online Newspaper Profiles
  • 1,100 papers now online 148 of 150 top papers
    active
  • Staffs smaller, younger, less traditionally
    oriented
  • Vary widely in size, mission, complexity
  • Role, culture, and traditions continue to evolve

37
Decline of Competition
  • Number of competing papers continues to decline
    in all areas
  • Joint-Operating Agreements (JOAs) allow competing
    papers to merge all but editorial departments to
    share, cut operating costs

38
Group Ownership Pros Cons
  • Pros
  • Bigger financial resources
  • Can afford new technologies
  • Can provide extensive staff training
  • Less market pressures
  • Cons
  • Less diversity of opinion
  • Absentee ownership
  • Lack of local empathy
  • Profits valued above quality
  • Tendency to avoid controversy

39
Producing the Newspaper
Newspaper organization varies with paper size,
but common job and department functions remain
similar.
  • Key Staff Positions
  • Publisher CEO of entire paper sets policy
  • Editor Oversees and helps set editorial
    direction
  • Managing Editor in charge of day-to-day
    operations
  • Dept. Editors Wire, Copy, City, Sports,
    Business, etc.

40
Producing the Newspaper
  • Key Department Functions
  • Advertising Responsible for selling all
    ad space
  • Business Covers administrative side
    of paper
  • Circulation Promotes circulation and
    newsstand sales
  • News-Editorial News, features, editorials,
    graphics, letters
  • Production Printing and distribution

41
Newspaper Organization Chart
42
How a Paper Gets Published, Step-by-step
  • News culled and written up from two main
    sources
  • Local leads
  • Wire Services
  • Sold ad volume determines newshole, (the
    available space
  • for the news and features newshole size varies
    daily)
  • Stories, graphics trimmed to fit newshole
  • Copy sent to composing room, then to printing
    presses
  • Papers distributed to home and newsstands

43
Newspaper Economics
  • Two major revenue sources for newspapers
  • Advertising about 80 of total paper revenue
  • Circulation subscription single copy sales

44
Potential Profit Problems
  • National circulation figures continue to
    decline
  • Percentage of people who read papers declining
  • National literacy rate declining
  • Local ad competition increasing from other
    media
  • Newsprint prices unstable, often increasing
  • Growing competition for classified ad dollars

Despite this, newspapers remain the most
cost-effective way to reach consumers for local
advertisers
45
Advertising Revenue Sources
  • National advertising about 8 of ad
    revenues
  • Local advertising about 45 of ad
    revenues
  • Classified ads about 40 of ad
    revenues
  • Preprinted inserts about 7 of ad
    revenues

46
General Expenses
  • News and editorial costs
  • Advertising sales generating expenses
  • Printing materials (newsprint 25 of all
    costs)
  • Circulation and distribution costs
  • General administrative costs

47
Getting Feedback
The Audit Bureau of Circulation (ABC) Purpose
To certify newspaper circulation figures for
accuracy figures determine advertising rates for
advertisers The ABC audits over three-fourths of
all U.S. and Canadian newspapers (about 2,600
newspapers).
48
End of Chapter 4Newspapers
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