Journalistic Essay

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    The established freedom within this uncensored war, unleashed an unprecedented amount of evidence, thus allowing the media to become a tool for oral and visual communication for the masses, ultimately changing the method of historical approach. The ‘nature of evidence’ significantly changed during the television age as the intensity of war coverage changed. Professor Phillip M. Taylor ascertains that the role of the media enabled the general public to be "take a front seat at the making of history

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    Many critics reject the notion of objectivity on the grounds that no person can be objective because we have biases and a variety of conflicts that we bring to our jobs. Mitchell Stephens, author of Beyond News: The Future of Journalism offers an argument against objectivity. Stephens states that objectivity is impossible because as much as one may try to disappear from the work, there is a kind of meditation that takes place in journalism no matter what, (117). By selecting who to interview or which

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    Throughout his career, Ernest Hemmingway’s writing style has brought many questions from critics all over the world. These questions mainly emerged due to his writing being different from anyone else during that time. Hemmingway’s writing was simple and direct unlike other fellow writers. This made it easier for people to comprehend and it made connections to his ideas straightforward. In works such as Old Man and the Sea and For whom the Bell Tolls, Ernest Hemmingway uses his style of writing to

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    question of weather or not to publsh a disturbing photo of a baby who later died as a result of the Oklahoma City bombing. What is the argument of each? How does the first person testimony by porter convey a different perepective than strupps more journalistic coverage? What rhetorical strategies are at work in each one? Response: The agument in Charles Porters article is not really much of an argument, he just writes about how the picture came to be and what he got out of it and I guess as readers

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    The democratization of mass media is another facet of the Internet revolution of the 2000s, which made it possible for differing opinions to become freer and more diversified than what was found in print newspapers and monographs. This form of “hyper-connectivity” is part of the revolutionary aspect of mass media communications, which formed new trends in the mass media of the Internet culture. This form of communication allowed for a much easier and freer platform for communication, which altered

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    Introduction The mass media is a tool delivery of messages and symbols. it serves to attract attention, entertain, inform, the media serves to add value and confidence to individuals so integrated in the institutional structures and society. The media is divided to two types namely print and electronic media. Print media include newspapers, magazines, and books as well as any printed and has elements of journalism. Electronic media such as radio, television and the Internet is the most advanced

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    choose alternative lifestyles. In a swirling cover of drugs and hedonism, Didion takes on the role of a detached spectator, keeping a distance from each person she meets. Rather than falling to the appeal of the counterculture, Didion maintains a journalistic detachment, staying away from personal engagement while systematically documenting the lives of people around her. Didion's intentional decision to remain disconnected is significant within the larger framework of the countercultural movement.

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    ‘preference’. Through the intentional and un-intentional portrayal of an established or implied bias the target audience’s opinions, ideals and motivations are necessarily affected. Specifically, the term ‘media’ in the context of this article refers to journalistic news sources that are

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    In cold blood is a nonfiction investigation of the murder of the Clutter Family written by Truman Capote first published in 1966 by Random House and was copyrighted in 1965. This book is a documentary of the events that occurred before and after November 15, 1959 when the clutter family, which was a farmer his wife and two children were murdered by Richard Eugene Hickock and Perry Edward Smith with a .12-gauge shotgun. Capotes intensive research during the time of the crime gives the reader a complete

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    The issue of journalistic ethics is examined in Janet Malcolm’s work The Journalist and the Murderer. This work stresses the importance of exercising good moral and ethic judgment. Janet Malcolm is very direct in her opinion on this “standard procedure” journalist use on their subjects to write a story. “Every journalist who is not too stupid or too full of himself to notice what is going on knows that what he does is morally in defensible.” For the sake of telling a good, profitable story, journalist

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