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News Media and Public Policy: Part 1

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Older Americans pay more attention to both national and local news. 4/26/09 ... Local TV news. Regularly watch, listen or read... Hispanics. Blacks. Whites ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: News Media and Public Policy: Part 1


1
News Media and Public Policy Part 1
2
Mass Media
  • Mass media make money by carrying out a special
    form of communication mass communication
  • Mass communication are messages produced by
    organizations and distributed to large audiences
    via technology, such as radio, cable, the
    internet, and satellites.

3
Mass Media Content (Messages)
  • Entertainment
  • News
  • Information
  • Education
  • Advertisements
  • A mix of the above

4
News Media and Public Policy Part 2
5
Top Mass Media Co. by Revenue
6
Top Mass Media Co. by Revenue
7
Top Online Media Co. by Revenue
8
What is News?
  • Hard news
  • Coverage of breaking events involving top
    leaders, major issues, or significant disruptions
    in the routines of daily life Objectivity is a
    key goal
  • Investigative reports are a special case
  • Opinion/Editorials
  • Soft news
  • All other news Market-centered journalism (of
    interest rather than need to know) Infotainment
    typically more sensational, more personality
    driven, less time-bound, more practical, more
    incident based

9
Newsworthiness Is About
  • Timeliness (e.g., current events)
  • Conflict
  • Close proximity (e.g., an issue that affects me)
  • Unusualness/novelty
  • Significant consequences or impact
  • Prominent players (e.g., politicians or
    celebrities)
  • Human interests

10
News Sources
  • Newspapers
  • News magazines
  • Television
  • Networks
  • Cable
  • Satellite
  • Newsletters (typically gather news reports from
    other sources)
  • Trade publications/websites (typically gather
    news reports from other sources)

11
News Sources
  • New media
  • World Wide Web (some sources provide first hand
    accounts, some sources gather news from other
    sources)
  • Public information utilities like CompuServe,
    AOL, Prodigy, MSN (typically gather news reports
    from other sources)
  • Wire services like AP, UPI, Reuters
  • Electronic information services like Dow Jones
    News Retrieval, Bloomberg News

12
Top Television Network News
  • Morning news (week ending 11/11/01)
  • Today Show (NBC) avg. 6 million viewers
  • Good Morning America (ABC) avg. 5.1 million
    viewers
  • The Early Show (CBS) avg. 2.8 million viewers
  • GMA gaining on the Today Show
  • Nightly news (week ending 1/13/02)
  • Nightly News (NBC), avg. 11.6 million viewers
  • World News Tonight (ABC), avg. 10.7 million
    viewers
  • The CBS Evening News, avg. 10 million viewers

13
Top Newspapers by Circ.(6m-9/01)
14
Top Magazines by Circ.(6m-9/01)
15
Elite News Outlets
  • Followed by opinion setters, policymakers,
    leaders, activists
  • Influence other media
  • Cable News Network Los Angeles Times
  • Washington Post (Washington Times)
  • Wall Street Journal
  • New York Times
  • NewsHour with Jim Lehrer
  • National Public Radio

16
News Medias Roles in the Policymaking Process
  • Government watchdogs
  • Expose fraud, abuse, inefficiencies in
    government policy/programs
  • Agenda setters
  • Direct attention to particular problems and
    alternatives that are discussed and/or addressed
  • Framers
  • Affect how audiences view problems and
    alternatives

17
News Medias Roles in the Policymaking Process
  • Educators
  • Teach the public about problems, policy
    alternatives, policymakers, policy advocates, the
    policy process, etc
  • Forums for debate
  • Provide a communication link between policy
    makers, politicians, and the public
  • Advocates
  • Via commentary and editorials, journalists
    champion causes or policy alternatives

18
News Criticisms
  • Is biased or not balanced
  • Is often inaccurate
  • Contains too much sensationalism
  • Contains too much violence/crime
  • Contains too little policy information
  • And more.

19
Views of the News
  • National surveys by Thomas Patterson
  • 49 of Americans rate news as excellent or
    good
  • 51 of Americans rate news as fair, poor, or
    awful

20
Views of the NewsSource Patterson Survey 2000
  • Americans have a love/hate relationship with the
    news

21
News Constraints
  • Deadlines
  • Competition
  • Journalists skills, training, perspectives
  • Size of space available for news
  • Length of broadcast spots or print articles
  • Complexity of policy issues

22
News Consumption
  • Pew Research Center Media Consumption Survey
    2000
  • 53 of Americans wish they had more time to
    follow the news
  • 50 of Americans only follow news closely when
    something important or interesting is happening

23
News ConsumptionSource Pew Research Center
Media Consumption Survey 2000
  • Many Americans do not hear the news and most
    news of interest is local.

24
News ConsumptionSource Pew Research Center
Media Consumption Survey 2000
  • Older Americans pay more attention to both
    national and local news

25
News ConsumptionSource Pew Research Center
Media Consumption Survey 2000
  • Online news is becoming the primary news source
    for young adults

26
News ConsumptionSource Pew Research Center
Media Consumption Survey 2000
  • There are few significant ethnic differences in
    news consumption

27
News Acceptance Source Pew Research Center Media
Consumption Survey 2000
  • Most Americans believe that the media is
    telling the truth. But some
    sources are not considered credible.

28
Final Points
  • There is no such thing as the media
  • News is affected by journalists, policy experts,
    policy makers, interest groups
  • News matters for newsworthy policy issues
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