CH 01
CH 01
CHAPTER
                                                   The story
                                                 of journalism
                                             Before you begin learning how to report and write stories,
                                           take a tour of the heroes and history that brought us this far.
                                      IN THIS CHAPTER:
                                      6 Newsroom heroes, legends and folklore
                                      Highlights from the history of journalism, from Mark Twain and Lois Lane to “Citizen Kane.”
                                      8 The birth of journalism
                                      How newspapers were established in America —
                                      and how the fight for a free press led to war.
                                      10 News in the 19th century
                                      Mass media dominated city streets, while
                                      yellow journalism gave reporters a bad name.
                                      12 News in the 20th century
                                      Radio and television threaten the media
                                      monopoly newspapers enjoyed for centuries.
                                      14 Today’s changing media landscape
                                      The availability of news online has created new opportunities and challenges for journalists.
                                      16 The student journalists’ news attitude survey
                                      Compare your news consumption habits to those of hundreds of other students nationwide.
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            Newsroom heroes,
            legends and folklore
            Looking for a career that boasts a long, colorful tradition?
            Welcome to the world of journalism, where reporters have been digging dirt,
            raking muck, making headlines and meeting deadlines for centuries now. It’s a
            history full of tabloid trash, of slimy sensationalists, of “drunkards, deadbeats and
            bummers” (as a Harvard University president once described reporters).                                                   In the 1970s, the investigative reporting of Bob
              But it’s a history full of heroes, too: men and women risking their lives to tell                                      Woodward (left) and Carl Bernstein exposed the
                                                                                                                                     Watergate scandal that forced President Nixon to
            stories of war and tragedy, risking imprisonment to defend free speech. And as                                           resign. The exploits of those two Washington Post
            you can see here, reporters have become beloved characters in pop culture, too,                                          reporters became a popular book and movie,
            turning up in movies, comics and TV shows as if guided by an occult hand.                                                providing inspiration to journalists everywhere.
                                                                                          MORE ON THE OCCULT HAND SOCIETY 294                           MORE ON WATERGATE AND “DEEP THROAT” > 248
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                                           1.“Rock journalism is people         4. What’s the number-one             final paragraphs, where he            12. Decades ago, reporters
                                            who can’t write interviewing         reason people watch most            uttered one of the most famous         typed a certain number to mark
                                            people who can’t talk for            local TV newscasts?                 phrases in journalism history.         the end of every story. What
                                            people who can’t read.”              
 news                              What did Stanley say?                  was that number?
                                            Who said that?                       
 sports                                                                  13. According to a recent 20-
                                            
 Madonna                            
 weather                          9. Who was the first woman
                                                                                                                                                            year study, which one of these
                                                                                                                     to regularly anchor a nightly
                                            
 Rush Limbaugh                     5. Who used to sign off his          network newscast?                      news topics are Americans
                                            
 Frank Zappa                        newscast by saying, “And                                                   most interested in?
                                            2. What fictional editor used        that’s the way it is. . .” ?       10. Miami Herald editor John            
 celebrities
                                            to cry, “Great Caesar’s ghost!” ?
                                                                                                                     McMullen made this prediction          
 disasters
                 Think you’re smart                                             6. Which cable news network          in 1982 about a radical new            
 money
                  when it comes to          3. In the photo below, Harry         attracts the most viewers?          journalistic venture: “I don’t         
 health
                  journalism facts          S. Truman holds a copy of a                                              think it has much chance. It
                                                                                7. Which news Web site               won’t offer much that’s original      14. On
                    and folklore?           legendary headline blooper.
                                                                                                                                                            the TV show
                                            What did the headline say?           attracts the most page views?       or different. I give it two years.”
                      Prove it.                                                                                                                             “Sex and the
                                                                                                                     What was he talking about?
                  Take this quiz to                                             8. In 1872, Henry Stanley,                                                  City,” what
                   rate your JQ —                                                star reporter for The New York     11. In what country will you            was Sarah
                  your Journalism                                                Herald, searched the African        find the world’s largest news-         Jessica
                      Quotient.                                                  jungle for a missing explorer.      paper, with a circulation of           Parker’s
                                                                                 Stanley’s epic account of his       14 million?                            newspaper
                     Answers on                                                  expedition climaxed in its          
 India 
 Brazil 
 Japan               job?
                      Page 300.
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                                                        THE RISE AND FALL                                        EXCERPTS from Publick Occurrences, Sept. 25, 1690:
                                                        OF AMERICA’S                                             On a sex scandal involving the King of France: France is in much trouble
                                                                                                                 (and fear), not only with us but also with his Son, who has revolted against
                                                        FIRST NEWSPAPER                                          him lately, and has great reason if reports be true, that the Father used to
                                                           Benjamin Harris was a printer who’d been              lie with the Sons Wife.
                                                        jailed in London for his subversive writings.            On a disease epidemic: The Small-pox which has been raging in Boston,
                                                        He fled to Boston in 1686, where he wrote                after a manner very Extraordinary is now very much abated. . . . The number
                                                        a popular spelling primer, ran a successful              of them that have dyed in Boston by this last Visitation is about three hun-
                                                        bookshop — and, in 1690, produced the                    dred and twenty. . . . It seized upon all sorts of people that came in the way
                                                                                                                 of it, it infected even Children in the bellies of Mothers that had themselves
                                                        first and only issue of Publick Occurrences
                                                                                                                 undergone the Disease many years ago.
                                                        Both Foreign and Domestick.
                                                                                                                 On the first Thanksgiving: The Christianized Indians in some parts of
                                                           It was a small newspaper, printed on three            Plimouth, have newly appointed a day of Thanksgiving to God for his Mercy
                                                        pages. The fourth was left blank, so readers             in supplying their extream and pinching Necessities under their late want of
                                                        could add news, then pass the paper along.               Corn, & for His giving them now a prospect of a very Comfortable Harvest.
                                                        But Harris had failed to obtain a printing               On war with the Indians (whom Harris calls “miserable Salvages”):
                                                        license. Worse, authorities claimed the paper            When Capt. Mason was at Fort Real, he cut the faces and ript the bellies of
                                                        contained “doubtful and uncertain Reports,”              two Indians, and threw a third overboard in the sight of the French, who in-
                                                        including criticism of military policy. So               forming the other Indians of it, have in revenge barbarously Butcher’d forty
                                                        after one issue, the governor shut it down.                                                    Captives of our that were in their hands.
             THE ZENGER TRIAL AND                                                    MELVILLE E. STONE, the Chicago publisher who modernized The Associated
                                                                                     Press in the early 1900s, on the significance of the Zenger trial:
             FREEDOM OF THE PRESS                                                                                                                                                 “The question before
                                                                                        The jury took the bit in their teeth and asserted their right to be the sole              the court is not just
               In 1734, when a brash young editor named                              judges of both the law and the facts. And so it came about that there was a
             John Peter Zenger printed accusations of official                                                                                                                    the cause of the poor
                                                                                     famous revolution in the colonial law. The judge ceased to be the sole arbiter of
             corruption in his New York Weekly Journal, the                                                                                                                       printer. No! It may in
                                                                                     an editor’s fate, and the truth when published from good motives and justifi-
             angry governor had him arrested for libel.                                                                                                                           its consequence affect
                                                                                     able ends became an adequate defense for the journalist brought to bar. For
             Zenger’s attorney, Andrew Hamilton, argued                                                                                                                           every freeman on the
                                                                                     the first time in the world’s history, the freedom of the press, so far as such
             that citizens have a right to criticize the govern-                                                                                                                  main of America. It
                                                                                     freedom was consistent with public rights, was established. The seed which
             ment, and that libel occurs only when printed                                                                                                                        is the best cause; it is
                                                                                     John Milton had sown a century before, when he wrote his famous plea for
                                                                                                                                                                                  the cause of Liberty. . .
             words are “false, malicious and seditious.”                             “unlicensed printing,” had come to fruition. Gouverneur Morris said this verdict
                                                                                                                                                                                  the liberty both of
             The jury agreed, and Zenger went free.                                  was “the dawn of that liberty which afterward revolutionized America.”
                                                                                                                                                                                  exposing and
                                                                                                                                                                                  opposing arbitrary
                                                                                                                                                                                  power by speaking
                                                                                   THE FIRST NEWSPAPER CARTOON                                                                    and writing Truth.”
                                                                                                                                                                                       Andrew Hamilton,
                                                                                     When Ben Franklin ran this editorial cartoon in his Pennsylvania                              during the Zenger trial, 1735
                                                                                   Gazette in 1754, the snake symbolized the American colonies, which
                                                                                   needed to unite in self-defense against the French and Indians. It                             “Advertisements are
                                                                                   later symbolized the colonies in their fight for independence from                             now so numerous
                                                                                   the British, and the design was incorporated into the nameplate of                             that they are very
                                                                                   the influential Massachusetts Spy (see story below).                                           negligently perused,
                                                                                     Franklin began his career as an apprentice on his brother’s paper,                           and it is therefore
                                                                                   the New England Courant. He became a witty writer and a bold                                   become necessary
                                                                                   editor; his Gazette was lively, popular and profitable. “If all printers                       to gain attention
                                                                                                                                                                                  by magnificence of
                                                                                   were determined not to print anything till they were sure it would
                                                                                                                                                                                  promises and by
                                                                                   offend nobody,” he said, “there would be very little printed.”
                                                                                                                                                                                  eloquence some-
                                                                                                                                                                                  times sublime and
                                                                                                                                                                                  sometimes pathetick.
             PATRIOTISM, PROPAGANDA AND THE REVOLUTIONARY WAR                                                                                                                     Promise — large
                                                                                                                                                                                  promise — is the soul
                In 1765, the British Parliament imposed a heavy tax on all                               EXCERPTS from The Massachusetts Spy, May 3, 1775:                        of advertising. The
             printed matter: the Stamp Act. Editors protested noisily, and                               Isaiah Thomas launches his eyewitness report on the Battle               trade of advertising
             colonists united to force a repeal of the tax — which further                               of Lexington with this: Americans! Forever bear in mind the              is now so near
             weakened Britain’s control of colonial printers.                                            BATTLE of LEXINGTON! — where British troops, unmolested and              perfection that it is
                 Editors grew even bolder as the revolu-                                                 unprovoked, wantonly, in a most inhuman manner, fired upon               not easy to propose
             tionary debate heated up, exerting political                                                and killed a number of our countrymen, then robbed them of
                                                                                                                                                                                  any improvement.”
                                                                                                         their provisions, ransacked, plundered and burnt their houses!
             influence and exhorting military action.                                                                                                                               Dr. Samuel Johnson,
                                                                                                         Nor could the tears of defenseless women, some of whom
             Objectivity disappeared. Loyalist editors                                                   were in the pains of childbirth, and cries of helpless babes,                  The London Idler, 1758
             were driven out of business, while                                                          nor the prayers of old age, confined to beds of sickness,
             patriot editors filled their papers with                                                    appease their thirst for blood or divert them from their
                                                                                                                                                                                  “Were it left to me
             news of rebellion and commentary such                                                       DESIGN of MURDER and ROBBERY!                                            to decide whether
             as Thomas Paine’s “Common Sense.”                                                                                                                                    we should have a
                                                                                                         From Thomas’s description of the battle:
                One of the most notable journalists                                                         . . . The commanding officer accosted the militia, in words to
                                                                                                                                                                                  government without
                                                                                                         this effect,“Disperse, you damn’d rebels! Damn you, disperse!”           newspapers, or
             of his time, Isaiah Thomas was a master        ISAIAH THOMAS                                   Immediately one or two officers discharged their pistols,             newspapers without
             printer and an articulate agitator. When                                                                                                                             a government, I
             he began publishing The Massachusetts Spy in 1770 it was non-                               which were instantaneously followed by the firing of four
                                                                                                         or five of the soldiers. . . . They fired on our people as they          should not hesitate
             partisan, but by 1775 Thomas was demanding independence                                     were dispersing, agreeable to their command, and we did not              a moment to prefer
             from England. His account of the Battle of Lexington (at right),                            even return the fire. Eight of our men were killed and nine              the latter.”
             reprinted in newspapers throughout the colonies, was a mix                                  wounded. The troops then laughed, and damned the Yankees,                     Thomas Jefferson,
             of outstanding reporting and persuasive propaganda.                                         and said they could not bear the smell of gunpowder.                                              1778
           1704: The first          1729: Ben Franklin takes                              1765: The Stamp Act forces all             1776: The Declaration of          1783: The Pennsylvania
           successful American        over The Pennsylvania                          papers to display an official British        Independence first appears           Evening Post, a thrice-weekly,
           newspaper, The             Gazette, making it the                             government seal and pay a tax           publicly in the Pennsylvania          increases its frequency to
           Boston News-Letter,              boldest and best                         that raises prices 50 percent. After    Evening Post and is reprinted in          become America’s first daily
           is published.               paper in the colonies.                        violent protest, the act is repealed.     20 other colonial newspapers.           newspaper.
                                 Throughout the 1700s:                       1735: Freedom of the press is                                                                1791: The Bill of Rights
                                 Mailmen on horseback (“postriders”)         strengthened in the colonies when                                                          provides that “Congress
                                 play a key role in delivering news          John Peter Zenger, jailed for libel by                                                        shall make no law . . .
                                 and newspapers to editors and               a New York governor after printing                                                        abridging the freedom of
                                 subscribers all across New England.         harsh criticism, is acquitted.                                                             speech or of the press.”
                  1808: The Missouri Gazette                                        1827: Reporters from three         1833: The New York             1844: The telegraph is used for
                     becomes the first paper                                     newspapers become the first             Sun becomes the              the first time to transmit
              printed west of the Mississippi                                     Washington correspondents,                first successful          news, making
              as printers accompany settlers                                 providing Congressional coverage                  penny paper            long-distance
                 into the expanding frontier.                                        that continues to this day.      published in the U.S.           reporting possible.
             BENNETT CRAFTS                             James Gordon Bennett was a terrific                  EXCERPT from The Herald, April 11, 1836:
             A NEW STYLE                              writer and a brilliant publisher. He                   When a prostitute known as Helen Jewett was murdered, Bennett visited the
                                                      launched the New York Herald in 1835                   crime scene. On the front page of the Herald, he provided a description that
             OF JOURNALISM                            with little money and no staff. But by                 enthralled readers and helped usher in a new era of sensational reporting:
                                      midcentury, the Herald had become the biggest news-                       “Here,” said the Police Officer, “here is the poor creature.”
                                      paper in the world due to its enterprising reporting,                     He half uncovered the ghastly corpse. I could scarcely look at it for a second
                                      sensational stories and innovative ideas: interviews,                  or two. Slowly I began to discover the lineaments of the corpse as one would the
                                                                                                             beauties of a statue of marble. It was the most remarkable sight I ever beheld —
                                      reviews, letters to the editor, money pages, society
                                                                                                             I never have, and never expect to see such another. “My God,” exclaimed I, “how
                                      columns, sports stories and “extra” editions.                          like a statue! I can scarcely conceive that form to be a corpse.” The perfect figure
                                        In Bennett’s words: “It is my passion, my delight,                   — the exquisite limbs — the fine face — the full arms — the beautiful bust — all
                                      my thought by day and my dream by night, to con-                       surpassed in every respect the Venus de Midici . . . .
                                      duct The Herald, and to show the world and posterity                      For a few moments I was lost in admiration at this extraordinary sight — a
                                      that a newspaper can be made the greatest, most                        beautiful female corpse that surpassed the finest statue of antiquity. I was
                                      fascinating, most powerful organ of civilization that                  recalled to her horrid destiny by seeing the dreadful bloody gashes on the right
                   BENNETT            genius ever dreamed of. ”                                              temple, which must have caused instantaneous dissolution.
         1851: Henry J. Raymond                1867: Emily Verdery    1867:                             1876:                                   1886: Reporters        1898: Yellow journalism
         founds The New York Times,               Bettey becomes      First                             Alexander Graham Bell invents           start earning               reaches its heights
         which becomes one of                     the first woman     practical                         the telephone; within seven             bylines in daily          (or possibly depths)
         America’s most responsible                   reporter on a   typewriter                        years, telephone lines will             newspapers on            as Hearst and Pulitzer
         and respected newspapers.                New York paper.     patented.                         connect New York and Chicago.           the East Coast.      trump up war with Spain.
               1857: Harper’s               1861-1865: For the first time, hundreds of        1878: E.W. Scripps      1880: First photograph                                  1897: The term
            Weekly, the first               reporters cover a big event: the Civil War.      begins building the      is printed in a news-                                “public relations”
            illustrated paper               Filing stories via telegraph forces reporters       first newspaper       paper (of some build-                                   is used, for the
                   in America,              to use a tighter writing style that becomes     chain; he eventually      ings, right) in the New                                  first time, by a
            makes its debut.                known as “the inverted pyramid.”                    owns 18 papers.       York Daily Graphic.                                  railroad company.
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                TIMELINE                                                                  1920: KDKA-                1926: As radio enjoys           1934: The                   1941: FDR declares
                                                                                          Pittsburgh begins          growing popularity, the         Associated                  war on Japan as
                (1900-2000)                                                               broadcasting the           NBC radio network is            Press begins                the largest radio
                1900: Satirical political cartoons become a popular                       first regular radio        formed; CBS will begin          transmitting                audience in history
                way for newspapers to comment on current events.                          schedule.                  broadcasting a year later.      wire photos.                listens in.
                1901: Marconi        Early 1900s: The era of “muckrakers” —                                     1923: Henry R. Luce        1938: “CBS World News           1939: NBC and
                sends the first       social reform-minded journalists and                                       launches Time               Roundup” debuts. Its          CBS begin
                radio signal         magazine writers who expose injustice,                                       magazine, the     influential news coverage will         commercial
                across the               fraud and political corruption in                                         nation’s first       make it America’s longest-         television
                Atlantic Ocean.           government and big business.                                              newsweekly.          running radio news show.          broadcasts.
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                    CLASSIC CLIPS                            RADIO RULES THE AIRWAVES                                              EDWARD R. MURROW reporting live during
                                                                                                                                   the Battle of Britain, Sept. 22, 1940:
                                                               In 1920, only a handful of hobbyists heard the first                There’s an ominous silence hanging over
                                                             radio broadcasts. But by 1927, 30 million Americans                   London. Out of one window there waves
                                                             tuned in to celebrate aviator Charles Lindbergh’s                     something that looks like a white bedsheet,
                                                             homecoming. Radio was entering its golden age.                        a window curtain swinging free in this night
                                                               Though powerful publishers at first prevented                       breeze. It looks as if it were being shaken
                                                             stations from broadcasting news, radio soon became                    by a ghost. There are a great many ghosts
                                                                                                                                   around these buildings in London. The                 MURROW
                                                             the first medium to provide a 24-hour stream of
                                                                                                                                   searchlights straightaway, miles in front of me, are still scratching
                                                             news coverage. During World War II, dramatic                          that sky. There’s a three-quarter moon riding high. There was one
                                                             reporting by legendary newsmen like Edward R.                         burst of shellfire almost straight in the Little Dipper. There are
                 A sniper shot and killed
              President John F. Kennedy on
                                                             Murrow helped hone the modern newswriting style:                      hundreds and hundreds of men . . . standing on rooftops in Lon-
              the streets of Dallas Friday. A                concise wording, short sentences, dramatic delivery.                  don tonight, waiting to see what comes out of this steel-blue sky.
              24-year-old pro-Communist who
              once tried to defect to Russia was
              charged with the murder shortly
              before midnight.                               AMERICA TURNS ON AND                                                  LEON HARRIS, CNN anchor,
                                                                                                                                   reporting live, Sept. 11, 2001:
                 Kennedy was shot about 12:30                TUNES IN TO TELEVISION                                                You are looking at this picture —
              p.m. Friday at the foot of Elm
              Street as the Presidential car
                                                               After World War II ended, Americans began buying                    it is the twin towers of the World
              entered the approach to the Triple             televisions — 1,000 sets a day. But in the early years                Trade Center, both of them being
              Underpass. The President died                  of network TV, programming was primarily devoted                      damaged by impacts from
              in a sixth-floor surgery room at               to entertainment (Milton Berle and “I Love Lucy”).                    planes. We saw one happen
              Parkland Hospital about 1 p.m.,                Ratings for newscasts were disappointingly low.                       at about maybe nine minutes
              though doctors say there was no                  Television journalism came of age in the 1960s.                     before the top of the hour, and
              chance for him to live after he                                                                                      just a moment ago, so maybe 18 minutes after the first impact,
                                                             In 1963, America sat spellbound for four days watch-
              reached the hospital.                                                                                                the second tower was impacted with a — by another — what
                                                             ing nonstop coverage of the Kennedy assassination.                    appeared to be, another passenger plane. In fact, we’ve got some
                       The Dallas Morning News,
                                     Nov. 23, 1963
                                                             To many critics, it was television’s finest hour. And                 tape replay of that. Do we have the tape available right now?
                                                             ever since, viewers worldwide have become depen-                          Here is the tape. . . . Incredible pictures. These happened just
                                                             dent upon television to cover big breaking stories.                   moments ago.
                                                             MEANWHILE, BACK AT
                                                             THE NEWSPAPER . . .
                                                                As the century progressed, newswriting became
                                                             more fact-based, less biased. Shorter sentences and
                                                             tight writing replaced the flowery prose of the past.
                 Man stepped out onto the moon               Reporters were trained to use the inverted pyramid,
              tonight for the first time in his              a story structure that stacks the big facts first, the
              two-million-year history.
                 “That’s one small step for man,”            lesser facts later.
              declared pioneer astronaut Neil                   Newspapers became more readable, more colorful,
              Armstrong at 10:56 p.m. EDT, “one              more objective and more timely than ever before.
              giant leap for mankind.”                       But their power and prominence gradually faded                       of the World Wide Web. Early online news sites were
                 Just after that historic moment             (along with the attention spans of most Americans).                  simple and slow-moving (as you can see in that 1996
              in man’s quest for his origins,                By 1994, the average American spent 38 minutes a                     home page for The New York Times, above).
              Armstrong walked on the dead                   day watching TV news, but only half as much —                          As online technology and access speeds improved,
              satellite and found the surface
              very powdery, littered with fine
                                                             19 minutes — reading a newspaper.                                    news consumers began migrating to the Web, and
              grains of black dust.                             In the 1990s, as computers invaded homes and                      newspapers began to wonder: How will we keep
                           The Washington Post,              offices, a new medium emerged: the Internet. At first,               readers interested in ink on paper? Are we doomed to
                                      July 21, 1969          news organizations were slow to realize the potential                become dinosaurs?
          1952: CBS News coins            1960: Only 2,000                                       1974: President Nixon             1982: USA Today makes
          the word “anchorman.”           people owned television                                resigns following dogged          its debut, shocking the
          NBC launches the first          sets in 1945; by now,                                  investigation of the Watergate    news establishment
          magazine-format TV              90% of American homes                                  scandal by The Washington         with shorter stories
          program, the “Today” show.      have a TV.                                             Post’s Woodward and Bernstein.    and bold color.
                   1963: TV news comes of age           Late 1960s: Anti-war         1976: The Apple II                 1980: Media mogul                          1990s: The Internet wires the
                          covering the Kennedy         and anti-establishment       becomes a popular                   Ted Turner launches the                  planet. Laptop computers, digital
                   assassination; 96% of homes        underground newspapers          home computer.                    Cable News Network                          cameras and modems allow
                      with televisions watch an        mushroom in U.S. cities   Nintendo sells its first               (CNN), the planet’s first               reporters to file stories and photos
               average of 32 hours of coverage.       and on college campuses.       computer games.                    24-hour news channel.                      from anywhere in the world.
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            Today’s changing
            media landscape
            Online journalism offers new tools, new challenges.
            If you’re an Indianapolis football fan, you may occasionally
            wonder: “Is Peyton Manning the greatest quarterback of all time?”
               To answer that question, The Indianapolis Star created the
            Manning Meter, a multimedia Web page that includes five photo
            galleries, a weekly game for kids, Manning’s complete career stats
            and a searchable database that tracks every pass he ever threw.
               This is not your father’s sports section. By converging text,
            images, interactivity and customizable data, new media like the
            Manning Meter are transforming the craft of journalism, making
            news coverage more engaging and informative than ever before.
                                                                  Kourosh Karimkhany, Wired News editor:         Jimmy Guterman, writer, magazine             wearable devices wirelessly connected to
                                                                     How will they get their news?               publisher and media consultant:              global networks delivering on-demand
                                                                  Pretty much the same way they’ve                  In 2025, only a small group of readers/   multimedia news and information.
                                                                  been getting it in the past 100 years:         viewers/listeners will take in what we          Reporters will need to focus on original
                                                                  through newspapers, radio, TV, Web and         consider “news” today. The combination       reporting, emphasizing firsthand accounts
                                                                  the gadget of the day (whatever the            of audience fragmentation and increas-       from the field. They’ll need to be comfort-
                                                                  combination of a phone, PDA, iPod and          ing desire to tune into like-minded          able with multiple media and engaging
                                                                  video player will look like). The plethora     sources will mean more people get            in interactive conversations with audi-
                                                                  of distribution will increase competition      information, but fewer people get objec-     ences, sources and other reporters.
                                                                  among news gatherers. I’m an optimist,         tive or vetted information. The need
                                                                  so I’ll guess that the competitive pres-       for reporters will continue to decrease;     Steve Yelvington, reporter, editor and
                                                                  sure will force journalists to improve         the need for pundits will continue to        Internet strategist:
                                                                  their craft. I’m hopeful that the works        increase. “News” of the WSJ/NYT/NPR             The reporting process will be very
                                                                  of a few solo journalists — who for the        variety will be a premium product for an     much about chasing down and killing
                                                                  first time have near-equal footing with        elite audience, like poetry is today.        bad information — debunking — and
                                                                  old-school, massive news organizations                                                      pointing out the good, and those respon-
                                                                  — will re-establish the nobility of jour-      John Pavlik, journalism professor and        sibilities will be taken up by conscien-
                                                                  nalists. And I’m especially hopeful that       author of “Journalism and New Media”:        tious amateurs as well as professionals.
                                                                  American-style journalism — which is             In 2025 people will get their news from    The value of professional journalism will
                                                                  the lubricant of democracy and equitable       a wide diversity of sources, including       not be so much about providing informa-
                                                                  capitalism — will spread around the            both old and new media, customized           tion, but rather providing clarity. And as
                                                                  world and take root in places it hasn’t        to individual preferences and styles.        William Gibson said, the future is already
                                                                  before, like China and the Middle East.        Among the new media will be miniature        here — it’s just unevenly distributed.
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                                                           The
                                                           STUDENT JOURNALISTS’
                                                           NEWS ATTITUDE SURVEY
                            In the next chapter, we’ll explore how journalists define news —                   Answer the questions below as honestly as you can. (There are no
                          and whether the American public agrees with them. But before we                    right or wrong answers, of course.) We’ve given this survey to more
                          proceed, let’s find out how YOU use the news and how you feel about                than 400 journalism students across the country. And on page 300,
                          the news media’s performance.                                                      you can see how your responses compare with all the rest.
                         1) I think news stories usually:                         6) In general, the news is biased in favor of:
                         
 Get the facts straight                                 
 Conservatives            
 Neither                       CONFIDENTIAL SOURCES
                         
 Contain inaccuracies and distortions                   
 Liberals                                                    Public officials or whistleblowers often
                                                                                                                                            slip reporters controversial information
                         2) I prefer to get my news:                              7) If you hear conflicting versions of a news story,      secretly — off the record — to avoid getting
                         
 By watching pictures or video footage,                 which version will you most likely believe?               into trouble. In exchange for this informa-
                            with audio narration                                  
 The local newspaper                                     tion, reporters promise to conceal the
                         
 By reading printed text                                
 The local TV news                                       identities of these anonymous sources.
                         
 Through a combination of text and images               
 The national TV news                                        In extreme cases, however, a story may
                                                                                  
 Radio news                                              trigger a criminal investigation. A reporter
                         3) Generally, I think the government:                    
 An independent Web site                                 could be ordered to testify, to tell a judge
                         
 Should do more to restrict what the news                                                                         the name of his or her confidential sources.
                            media publish                                         8) Which of these adjectives would you generally              Suppose this happened to you. What
                         
 Should do as little as possible to restrict what       use to describe most news today? (You can select          would you do? If you reveal your source’s
                            the news media publish                                more than one):                                           name, you break your promise. You expose
                                                                                  
 Boring                   
 Entertaining                 your source to legal or professional harm.
                         4) The president is assassinated. What would you         
 Useful                   
 Sensationalized              In the future, your reporting ability may
                         most likely do? (You can choose more than one):          
 Depressing               
 Negative                     be compromised because other sources
                         
 Turn on the TV, then leave it on constantly to                                                                   won’t trust you; your colleagues and your
                            monitor the situation as intensely as possible.       9) How often do you generally watch TV news?              news organization may be discredited, too.
                         
 Turn on the TV, see what’s happening, then turn        
 Daily                
 Occasionally                         BUT if you refuse to name your source,
                            it off and get on with my life.                       
 Several times a week 
 Never                            you could hamper a criminal investigation.
                         
 Track developments online by monitoring news                                                                     You could be shielding a lawbreaker. And
                            Web sites.                                            10) How often do you generally read newspapers?           the judge could send you to jail for days —
                         
 Buy a newspaper as soon as I saw one that had          
 Daily                
 Occasionally                     weeks — until you cooperate.
                            a big assassination headline.                         
 Several times a week 
 Never                                What would you do?
                         
 Listen to radio news and talk shows.
                         
 Avoid the news as much as possible to escape           11) How often do you generally read news online?          
 As a reporter, I’m obligated to protect my
                                                                                                                                                sources, even if it means going to jail.
                            the annoying hype and overkill.                       
 Daily                
 Occasionally
                                                                                  
 Several times a week 
 Never                            
 As a citizen, I’m obligated to honor and
                         5) Which of these people do you consider to be                                                                         obey the legal system and comply with
                         journalists? (Check all that apply):                     12) A news reporting career seems like it would be            the judge’s request.
                         
 Bill O’Reilly          
 Rush Limbaugh                 (check all that apply):                                   
 It would depend on the circumstances
                         
 Bob Woodward 
 Katie Couric                            
 Rewarding               
 Frightening                       of the case.
                         
 Oprah Winfrey          
 Jon Stewart                   
 Frustrating             
 Important
                         WHICH OF THESE STATEMENTS DO YOU MOST AGREE WITH? CHECK EITHER “A” OR “B”; LEAVE BLANK FOR “NEITHER.”
                         
 a) I prefer news that’s presented with an attitude, even if it’s opinionated,     
 a) I can usually relate to most news stories I read, see and hear.
                              because it makes the topics more interesting.                                  
 b) I generally feel that most news stories have little relevance to my life.
                         
 b) I prefer news that is as neutral and objective as possible. I resent it
                              when journalists inject their own opinions into stories.                       
 a) When I read newspapers, magazines or Web sites, I frequently take the
                                                                                                                   time to read long stories that analyze issues and events in depth.
                         
 a) I could easily go for days without reading any news.                           
 b) When I read newspapers, magazines or Web sites, I usually just browse
                         
 b) I couldn’t go a day without reading any news.                                        a few paragraphs at a time. I hardly ever read stories in depth.
                         
 a) Journalists are too critical of public figures and government policy.          
 a) Generally, I prefer to read news about serious issues and major events.
                         
 b) Journalists don’t do enough to challenge public figures and expose             
 b) Generally, I prefer to read celebrity news and lighter, offbeat stuff.
                               governmental problems.