A Future for the News: What's Wrong with Mainstream News Media in America and How to Fix It investigates and offers solutions to significant problems with the productive functioning of the mainstream news media. Criticism of the mainstream news media is almost a national pastime in America, and widespread polling shows credibility ratings of journalists among the lowest of any institution in America, almost as low as that of Congress. The institution of news media faces a plummeting morale of journalists; loss of readership; loss of viewers to competing, non-traditional venues for news; and so…mehr
A Future for the News: What's Wrong with Mainstream News Media in America and How to Fix It investigates and offers solutions to significant problems with the productive functioning of the mainstream news media. Criticism of the mainstream news media is almost a national pastime in America, and widespread polling shows credibility ratings of journalists among the lowest of any institution in America, almost as low as that of Congress. The institution of news media faces a plummeting morale of journalists; loss of readership; loss of viewers to competing, non-traditional venues for news; and so on. Moving from these problems to realistic solutions, this book serves as an instruction manual of sorts, with each chapter offering a pathway of improvement. This collection brings together academics and news industry professionals with individual chapters taking a specific area of concern and making a case for particular solutions to the problems presented. Solutions range from ones designed for individual reporters to consider, to those that target newsrooms, the institution of journalism, and news consuming audiences. Together they aim to help a beleaguered institution restore itself as a fully functioning asset of the American Republic. Contributors: Abe Aamidor, Brent Baker, Alex Christy, Jennifer Cox, Michelle Ferrier, John Gable, Katherine Haenschen, Michael Horning, Michael Max Knorpp, Jim A. Kuypers, Serena Miller, Cayce Myers, Stephen D. Perry, Soo Young Shin, Benjamin Voth, Adriel Warren.
Jim A. Kuypers is professor of communication in the School of Communication at Virginia Tech. He is the author, editor, or co-author of 16 books, including Purpose, Practice, and Pedagogy in Rhetorical Criticism (winner of the Everett Lee Hunt Award for Outstanding Scholarship) and Partisan Journalism: A History of Media Bias in the United States (a Choice Outstanding Academic Title for 2014). He is a former co-editor for the American Communication Journal. He is the recipient of the American Communication Association's Outstanding Contribution to Communication Scholarship Award, the Southern States Communication Association's Early Career Research award, and Dartmouth College's Distinguished Lecturer Award.
Inhaltsangabe
Intro. Problems in the Mainstream News and How to Fix Them Jim A. Kuypers Chapter 1. Trust in the News: Newsroom Attempts and Failures and the Promise of Helpful Technology Michael Horning Chapter 2. Objectivity and Anti-Objectivity in Journalism William Max Knorpp Chapter 3. Journalist Filter Bubbles, Media Bias, and Declining Trust in News: How to Restore Confidence in Journalism John Gable and Adriel Warren Chapter 4. Reforming Journalism Credibility: Debate as a Pathway to Journalistic Renaissance Benjamin Voth Chapter 5.A Renewal of Journalistic Credibility through the Ancient Religious Tradition of Jubilee Stephen D. Perry Chapter 6. Apples and Bananas: The Necessity of Differentiating Facts and Opinion for Democracy-Nurturing Fact-Checking Alex Christy and Brent Baker Chapter 7. Inclusion and Objectivity: How the Media Stumbles When It Seeks to Protect Historically Underserved and Marginalized Communities Abe Aamidor Chapter 8. Solving Media Deserts Requires Going Beyond Mapping News Michelle Ferrier Chapter 9. The Problem-Solving Solutions Journalism Model: Treating News Audiences as Problem Solvers in Solutions Journalism Serena Miller, Soo Young Shin, and Jennifer Cox Chapter 10. Media Monopolies, News Making, and How Media Conglomeration Affects the Marketplace of Ideas Cayce Myers Chapter 11. Talking About Low Voter Turnout is a Self-Fulfilling Prophecy Katherine Haenschen Chapter 12. Democracy-Destroying Practices of the American Mainstream News Media and Their Potential Solutions Jim A. Kuypers Index About the Contributors
Intro. Problems in the Mainstream News and How to Fix Them Jim A. Kuypers Chapter 1. Trust in the News: Newsroom Attempts and Failures and the Promise of Helpful Technology Michael Horning Chapter 2. Objectivity and Anti-Objectivity in Journalism William Max Knorpp Chapter 3. Journalist Filter Bubbles, Media Bias, and Declining Trust in News: How to Restore Confidence in Journalism John Gable and Adriel Warren Chapter 4. Reforming Journalism Credibility: Debate as a Pathway to Journalistic Renaissance Benjamin Voth Chapter 5.A Renewal of Journalistic Credibility through the Ancient Religious Tradition of Jubilee Stephen D. Perry Chapter 6. Apples and Bananas: The Necessity of Differentiating Facts and Opinion for Democracy-Nurturing Fact-Checking Alex Christy and Brent Baker Chapter 7. Inclusion and Objectivity: How the Media Stumbles When It Seeks to Protect Historically Underserved and Marginalized Communities Abe Aamidor Chapter 8. Solving Media Deserts Requires Going Beyond Mapping News Michelle Ferrier Chapter 9. The Problem-Solving Solutions Journalism Model: Treating News Audiences as Problem Solvers in Solutions Journalism Serena Miller, Soo Young Shin, and Jennifer Cox Chapter 10. Media Monopolies, News Making, and How Media Conglomeration Affects the Marketplace of Ideas Cayce Myers Chapter 11. Talking About Low Voter Turnout is a Self-Fulfilling Prophecy Katherine Haenschen Chapter 12. Democracy-Destroying Practices of the American Mainstream News Media and Their Potential Solutions Jim A. Kuypers Index About the Contributors
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