Journalistic Essay

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    my sources and in my stories. • I will maintain allegiance to the core journalistic values that build toward truthfulness and informing the public by incorporating the diversity of thought, opinion, race, and financial background into my journalism. ________________________________________ Summary My personal code of ethics is a code for me to follow in pursuit of truth. This code will allow me to better fulfill my journalistic duties. It will guide me through making decisions honestly by being transparent

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    systematically selected to generate 400 samples. Content analysis was conducted first to identify the Theme of Posts: 1 = Holiday ritual (e.g. holiday greetings to self or other fellow journalists, 26.5%), 2 = Journalistic roles (expressions related to normative journalistic roles, 19.5%), 3 = Occupational constraints (compaints about occupational challenges, 39.0%), 4 = Satire (e.g. use symbolic resources to mock themselves and journalism profession, 3.5%), 5 = New media (e.g. concerns about

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    The effectiveness of gatekeeping More recent studies on the effectiveness of gatekeeping by Bruns (2005) argue in the digital age journalism is increasingly influenced from the outside. According to Bruns (2005) “the fourth estate is in danger of being overwhelmed by the ‘fifth estate’, the growing number of PR merchants and spin doctors influencing the news agenda undermining the reality of the gatekeeping process itself”. Furthermore, in this day and age 24 hours news broadcast results in journalists

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    proper use of technology and due to the numerous ethical issues, that arise from sensationalist media practices. First, the invasion of privacy can be justified by uncovering vital information that serves public interest to be considered ethical journalistic practice (Plaisance, 2014, p. 187). However, while there is less ethical merit in providing the public with the information it “wants” to know, it is justifiable under business matters if it is not malicious or extremely invasive. It is a journalist’s

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    January 19, 2015 through the 25th, there was a clear and cautious decision to keep journalism standards and not wanting to alienate themselves from the already falling readership through their agenda setting and framing. In this context, the journalistic standards being used are the ones provided by The Society of Professional Journalists (SPJ). These standards include, “seeking the truth,” “accuracy,” “context,” and “[being] correct.” Agenda setting is defined as the specific topics published

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    It is standard journalistic practice that a story must be news worthy in order for it to be of any significance. Newsworthiness is determined by the following criteria impact, timeliness, prominence, proximity, the bizarre, conflict, human interest, and currency. (SPJ) Reports must demonstrate how their story fits into one of these criteria before it can be considered news. While these factors of newsworthiness are not lost in today’s media, many media outlets have started to sensationalize the

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    Grandfather. Then we get to hear her experience or brief encounter with a supposed Hee Haw Honey. Her essay lets us see her exploring between two writing styles, creative and journalistic, and the associated struggles with composing in these very different literary styles. Can she play with her creative writing and tie in the journalistic report with maybe a few embellishments for better emphasis? I think she does this quite well. The narrator begins her story sharing antics from her teenage years, listening

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    Merrill’s arguments in “The Professionalization of Journalism” against professionalizing journalism What is a profession? The Oxford English Dictionary defines professions as that way of life/manner of making a living that involves the application of a specialized knowledge of particular subjects, field, or science to fee-paying clientele. Examples of professions include nursing, architecture, medicine and engineering. Although journalism has some characteristics of a profession, for Merrill it

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    As Bourdieu pointed out, “no cultural product exists by itself, i.e., outside the relations of interdependence which link it to other products” (Bourdieu, 1993: p. 32). These goods are also produced under specific conditions, not in a vacuum. This assumption is valid to art, literature, but also to journalism as a massive cultural production, like Bourdieu and other authors had demonstrated (Benson & Neveu, 2005; Benson, 2006; Bourdieu, 1994; English, 2015; Marlière, 1998; Murrell, 2015; Schultz

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    Merrill’s arguments in “The Professionalization of Journalism” against professionalizing journalism What is a profession? The Oxford English Dictionary defines professions as that way of life/manner of making a living that involves the application of a specialized knowledge of particular subjects, field, or science to fee-paying clientele. Examples of professions include nursing, architecture, medicine and engineering. Although journalism has some characteristics of a profession, for Merrill

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