| last updated 
      9/18/2012 
			
			What is "the News 
			Themes in in Considering "What is News 
				
				
				"It’s what news people decide!"
				
				News is created/interpreted not just "reported."
				
				News is rhetoric/persuasion as 
				well as information. 
			  
			[ ] = items below that reflect Jamieson's views 
			in the text 
			What makes news "news"  
			     (Content factors - 
			What's the substance of the information or event?) 
				
				
				timeliness [novel or deviant]
				
				prominance
				
				significant consequence
				
				proximity
				
				human interest  [personalized - about people - accessible] 
					
					
					talking head interview on economy
					
					focus on personalities and motives
					
					flamboyance over substance
				
				[ discrete events - actual/concrete not theoretical]      
			(Form factors - What "shape" does the story or information 
			come in?) 
				
				
				visual quality
				
				[drama - conflict, emotion, controversy, violence]
				
				[access]
				
				comprehensibility
				
				fits known interpretation [ linked to issues of on-going concern 
				to media - see below ]
 Some Interpretive [ Themes, AKA 
				Schemata ]:   (p. 39)
 
					
					
					[
					appearance v reality ]
					
					[
					little guys v big guys ]
					
					[
					good v evil ]
					
					self-serving establishment
					
					environment and other "good" causes
					
					war v peace
					
					family values, children, motherhood 
					
					[
					efficiency v inefficiency ]
					
					[
					uniqueness ("news of the odd") ]
					
					[ hypocracrisy, abuse of power and lying ]  recent news 
					norms include much of this. 
		Constraints on the News 
		EXTERNAL to the 
		content itself 
			
			
			[Access]
			
			News hole (column inches; 22 of 30 minutes) sets limits and ;yet 
			must be filled in the 24 hour news cycle.   [time and space]
			
			News flow (the silly season)
			
			staffing  [cost]   
		INTERNAL to the content 
		itself 
			
			
			perceptions of audience - Review Atlas v NYT
			
			[use available material] (see access above)
			
			competition  - "pack journalism" or "consensible nature of the news"
			
			[covering visual events and newsworthy people]
			
			[avoid giving offense]
			 
				
				
				executive decisions ( publisher's interests)
				
				advertiser pressure
				
				source pressure ( tearful family, politicians, photo ops, staged 
				events, rewards to "good" reporters) 
		Presentational factors influencing the news 
			
			
			 [reporter 
			expertise]
			
			use of interviews rather than "library" sources
			
			[fairness and balance]
			
			[story length] - news hole
			
			[structure of story ] 
				
				
				narrative
				
				problem - solution
				
				climax
			
			[objectivity] 
		From Hard News to Soft News 
			
				
				
				
				 hard news - 5 Ws (Who, What, When, Where, Why?)
				
				
				 features  (hsitory and current context, depth)
				
				
				 news analysis (What's important and why?  What it 
				means?
				
				
				 signed column  (Writers' opinions)
				
				
				 editorial (The news organization's opinion)
				
				
				 new journalism  (Written like fiction) 
		           
		Discussion questions for Thursday   
	  1.   
	  Identify news 
	  stories/ events that illustrate each of the content factors. 
	  What themes did the news cast seem to introduce into the stories? 
	  2.   
	  Identify news 
	  stories/ events that illustrate at least three of the form factors. 
	  Think of examples of the way visual content (and camera angles, special 
	  effects etc.) influenced the presentation of the news. 
	  3.   
	  Identify news 
	  stories/ events that illustrate one or two of the 
	  external constraints on the news. 
	   4. Identify news stories/ events 
	  that illustrate one or two of the internal 
	  constraints on the news.
	  
	   
	  5.  Identify news stories/ events that 
	  illustrate one or two of the presentational factors 
	  that influence the news. 
 6.  What instances of story structure (ordering) did 
	  you see?  How did the newscast 
	  attempt to deal with “objectivity?
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