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Newspapers

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The news media, especially print, ... 1878 Cleveland Penny Press ... sentences about what's happening in news and sports from every state in the Union. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Newspapers


1
Newspapers
2
Colonial American Press Era1690-1780
  • Elite Stage of EPS Cycle
  • Carried foreign news, official information, royal
    proclamations and local news. Still subject to
    the crown, but rarely enforced. Local governors
    censored the newspapers into the 18th Century.
  • Authoritarian Theory

3
Authoritarian Theory
  • Dates back to the 16th Century
  • Purpose is to protect the government and churches
    from the press.
  • The government looked at it as a way to UNIFY the
    community and to CONTROL the Press.
  • In most cases, the publishers were the
    government. If newspapers were distributed
    without permission, it was considered treason.
  • We call it CONTROL. They called it UNIFICATION.

4
Governor of Virginia Colonies - 1641
  • I thank God, that we have not free schools, nor
    free printing and I hope that we shall not have
    them for a hundred of years. For learning has
    brought disobedience and hearsay into the world
    and printing has divulged and libeled them
    against the government. God keep us from them
    all.

5
Benjamin Harris
  • Boston - 1690
  • Publick Occurrences, Both Foreign Domestick
  • Came to America to flee the constraints of
    England. He offended the King of France by
    saying that the King was having an affair with
    his sons wife. But in the colonies, just like
    in England, his newspaper still needed consent of
    the crown.

6
Boston Newsletter
  • 1704
  • John Campbell Postmaster General
  • The audience was the educated Elite
  • Supported by the government, therefore had more
    editorial freedom.

7
William Bradford
  • 1719
  • First Colonial Printing Press
  • First Paper Mill in USA
  • 1725 Founded the New York Gazette
  • I hope that the General Assembly will find some
    effectual remedy to revive the dying credit of
    the Province, and restore us to our happy
    circumstances.

8
Benjamin Franklin
  • 1721 New England Courant
  • 1729 Pennsylvania Gazette
  • First to provide ad space
  • First to lead editorial independence
  • Supported paper through selling printing
    supplies.

9
Benjamin Franklin
  • Invented the Franklin Stove
  • Established our laws of electricity
  • Delivered the Bill of Rights to England.
  • First Postmaster General
  • First Police and Fire forces
  • Founded University of Pennsylvania

10
Peter Zenger
  • 1733
  • German Immigrant
  • New York Weekly Journal
  • Fought the courts based on TRUTH, LIBERTY, and
    the right to SPEAK AND WRITE THE TRUTH.
  • First major victory for the Press.
  • By 1765, the British Parliament imposed a tax on
    all legal documents, official papers, books and
    newspapers. All printing had to be done on
    taxed paper. Franklin was instrumental in getting
    this tax eliminated.

11
Colonial Period Traditions of Today
  • The news media, both print and broadcast, relish
    their independence from government control.
  • The news media, especially print, actively try
    and mold government policy.
  • Journalist are committed to the seeking the
    truth.
  • The news media are economic entities that react
    in their own self-interest if their profit making
    ability is threatened.

12
Partisan Period1776-1833
  • Political Parties were formed.
  • Branches of the Government were formed.
  • The Alien Sedition Acts Supported by John
    Adams, president of the United States these acts
    restricted members of the press of criticizing
    the government, president and congress. Under
    these acts, 25 were brought to trial, and 10
    convicted.
  • Jefferson banned this act when he was elected
    President in 1800 and pardoned the 10 convicted.

13
Libertarian Theory
  • Government should exist to solely serve the
    interest of the people. Therefore, the media
    should serve the PEOPLE and not the GOVERNMENT.
  • James Madison said . Nothing could be more
    irrational than to give people power and then
    withhold information from them.

14
Partisan Period Traditions of Today
  • Government should keep its hands out of the press
    The first amendment.
  • The news media are a forum for discussion and
    debate.
  • The news media should comment vigorously on
    public issues.
  • Government transgressions against the news media
    will ultimately be met by public rejection.

15
Penny Press Era1833-1865
  • Popular Stage of EPS Cycle
  • Newspapers for the Common Man
  • Industrial Revolution
  • Technology
  • Child Labor Laws
  • Work Day is established
  • More Leisure Time
  • Education

16
Benjamin Day
  • 1833, at 22 founded and published the New York
    Sun, 1,000 copies at a penny each.
  • Highlighted local events, scandals, and police
    reports. It also ran serialized stories making
    the legends Davy Crockett and Daniel Boone
    popular. He also blazed the trail for celebrity
    news.
  • By 1836, circulation zoomed to 20,000.
  • By 1838, circulation was more than the 11 other
    newspapers serving New York combined.
  • First to use color
  • Began the tradition of using Newsboys
  • Used advertising as a way to pay the bills.

17
James Gordon Bennett
  • 1835- New York Morning Herald
  • Aimed to free his newspaper from political
    parties. He wanted an independent paper serving
    the middle and working class readers
  • Aggressive News Style. He had fast boats that
    would sail out to the ships and bring back the
    news before any other editor would have it. When
    the telegraph was invented, he had writers from
    around the world send in their articles. COVER
    THE CITY
  • Developed the term, newsroom
  • By 1860 had the worlds largest daily newspaper at
    80,000.

18
Horace Greeley
  • 1841 New York Tribune
  • Influential Editor who separated news from
    editorials
  • An crusader for the common man, he advocated the
    distribution of government land to settlers,
    fought for fair labor laws, denounced monopolies,
    stood up against corrupt corporations, opposed
    capital punishment, and fought for the end of
    slavery.

19
News Wire Services
  • 1848 Associated Press (AP)
  • 1907 United Press formed by Scripps
  • 1909 International News Service formed by Hearst
  • 1958 United Press and International News Service
    merge to become United Press International
    (UPI)
  • 1982 UPI sold to Media News Corp.
  • 1989 UPI sold to Mexican Mafia
  • 1993 UPI sold to Saudi Arabia
  • 1999 UPI is sold to the Associated Press
  • AP is largest American owned wire service
  • Reuters is largest foreign owned wire service

20
Penny Press Traditions of Today
  • Pyramid Story Structure
  • Coverage and writing style that appealed to a
    general audience.
  • A commitment to social improvement, which
    included a willingness to crusade against
    corruption.
  • Providing information to the people quickly.
  • A detached, neutral perspective in reported
    events, a tradition fostered by the Associated
    Press, and often referred to as objective
    reporting (telling news without bias).

21
Yellow Journalism Era1865- 1900
  • Popular Stage of EPS Cycle
  • End of the Civil War to the Turn of the Century
  • Scandalous and Sensationalistic
  • Money versus the need for information commonly
    known as The Circulation War.
  • The Yellow Kid Comic Strip

22
Joseph Pulitzer
  • 1883 founded the New York World.
  • Emphasized human interest, and crusaded for
    worthy causes. He was stickler for accuracy and
    fair reporting.
  • He started the advice column and womens pages.
    This resulted in increased advertising
    opportunities with department stores and other
    shopping venues.
  • He was the first to employ women as reporters
    Nellie Blye.
  • Raised the funds for the ground in which the
    Statue of Liberty stands
  • After his death the Columbia School for
    Journalism is founded and the Pulitzer Prize is
    created in his honor

23
William Randolph Hearst
  • Educated at Harvard
  • Worked for Joseph Pulitzer at New York World
  • San Francisco Examiner
  • 1895 New York Journal
  • Passion versus Greed
  • Motto When the news didnt fit the mold he
    envisioned, he shaped it until it did.
  • At one point he hired gangsters to distribute his
    newspapers.
  • At the peak of his career, he had a hand in
    newspapers, radio stations, magazines, motion
    picture studios, and news syndicates.

24
The War between Hearts and Pulitzer
  • Hearst wanted to out-do Pulitzer and take over
    circulation control in New York.
  • The Yellow Kid was a cartoon at the time and
    popular with readers. They fought for control,
    with both finally publishing the cartoon.
  • At one point, they both printed anti-Spanish
    stories from Cuba, many of them trumped up. Some
    say that the public hysteria fueled by the
    feuding publishers helped begin the
    Spanish-American war, when a US Battleship
    exploded in a Havana harbor, both stated that it
    was a Spanish attach, when in fact historians say
    the explosion was an accident.

25
Edward Scripps
  • 1878 Cleveland Penny Press
  • First Newspaper Chain running up to 35
    mass-audience papers in 15 states.
  • Community Newspapers editors receiving 49 of
    the stock
  • HIS GOAL Offer newspapers at a low price, be
    politically independent, pro-labor and written
    for the ordinary person.
  • His portfolio includes television, newspapers,
    hospitals, and other philanthropic causes.

26
20th Century Press1900 - Present
  • Social Responsibility Theory
  • Set the standard for objective, independent and
    responsible journalism.
  • Schools in Journalism were created.
  • Ethical Standards are developed

27
20th Century Press / 1900 - Present
  • Adolph Ochs - Believed in sticking to
    principles, regardless of the discomfort it might
    cause others.
  • At age 11, worked as an office assistance at a
    newspaper in Tennessee. At age 19, he purchased
    the paper and became publisher. In 1896, at the
    age of 28, he bought the bankrupt New York Times.
    Pulitzer and Hearst has taken most of the
    leadership from the Times. He raised the price
    of the paper to 5 cents and announced that his
    paper wasnt going to sink to the levels of
    yellow journalism.
  • In one year, circulation increased from 9,000 to
    780,000.
  • He is considered to be the first publisher to
    prove that you can succeed in circulation, profit
    and journalistic responsibility.

28
Social Responsibility Theory
  • Complaints leading to the SR Theory
  • The press gives their own opinions, especially
    when it comes to politics.
  • The press allows big business and advertisers to
    control editorial content.
  • The press is more entertaining than newsworthy
    and often lacks substance
  • The press endangers public morals
  • The press invades the policy of individuals
  • The press is controlled by the business class.

29
Social Responsibility Theory
  • The press should
  • Fulfill certain obligations to its communities
  • Set standards of professionalism, truth, accuracy
    and objectivity
  • Work within the framework of the law
  • Avoid giving out information that might lead to
    crime, violence, or civil disorder.
  • Represent the diversity of our culture and give
    various viewpoints.
  • Pulitzer said Without high ethical ideals a
    newspaper not only is stripped of its splendid
    possibilities for public service, but also may
    become a positive danger to the community.

30
USA Today
  • Since its founding in 1982, USA Today has had a
    profound influence on establishing newspapers as
    a strong visual medium with color and graphics
    integrated with words. The newspapers weather
    coverage has also been imitated.
  • Most sales comes from airports, hotels and places
    where travelers pick it up for a quick fix on the
    news.
  • Guaranteed in every issue are at least a few
    sentences about whats happening in news and
    sports from every state in the Union.

31
Wall Street Journal
  • In 1882 Charles Dow and Edward Jones roamed the
    New York financial district for news, which they
    sent by courier to their clients. The service
    expanded into a newsletter.
  • In 1889, the Wall Street was founded. By 1900,
    circulation reached 10,000 with coverage in
    Boston, Philadelphia and Washington. By 1940,
    the paper reached more than 30,000. Today with
    a daily circulation 1.8 million, the Journal is
    the second largest US Daily. USA Today is
    number one at 2.2 million.

32
Challenges - Circulation
  • Newspapers have consistently been the most
    profitable businesses of the 20th Century. Even
    with circulation slipping, down to 52.4 million
    from 62.8 million in 1988, the industry continues
    to be profitable. Most major chains, have
    reported operating profits in the 20 percent
    range.
  • But in order to do so, reporting staffs have been
    trimmed, advertising rates have increased, paper
    quality and size has changed, and some print
    fewer pages.

33
Challenges Sunday Edition
  • Sunday editions have kept newspapers afloat for
    years because they were FAT with advertising. In
    fact, 40 of a daily newspapers revenue came from
    Sunday Editions.
  • But in 2002, newspapers found that 73 of the
    readers over 65 read the Sunday paper, while only
    49 of readers 18-24 read it. In general, young
    people are not reading the newspapers as in years
    past.

34
Challenges Marketing Databases
  • With more and more people getting their news from
    online, a growing number of newspapers are
    requiring you to register. Access is free in
    exchange for personal information.
  • While many newspapers web sites offer the same
    wide range coverage as the traditional print
    editions, many specialize in coverage for a
    particular audience. For instance, the Florida
    Today, out of Cocoa Beach, near Cape Canaveral,
    has saturation coverage of the nations space
    program.

35
Elite and Popular Stage
  • Elite
  • Colonial American Press
  • Partisan Period
  • Popular
  • Penny Press Era
  • Yellow Journalism Era
  • Social Responsibility Era

36
Specialization
  • Ethnic Publications
  • Business Publications
  • Web Site Access
  • Graphics
  • Sections

37
Importance of Newspapers
  • 1,570 daily newspapers put out 52.8 million
    copies a day, reaching 127 million per day (2.2
    per paper)
  • Weekly newspapers put out 50 million copies,
    reaching about 200 million per week (4 per paper)
  • The Los Angeles Times owned by the Chicago
    Tribune alone has a circulation of 1.3 million
    per day. It has 1300 editors, 22 foreign
    bureaus, and 13 US bureaus. 57 reporters alone
    cover the federal government.

38
Media Literacy
  • What percentage of the paper is news?
  • What is the content?
  • Does the newspaper have extensive local coverage
    or heavy on news wire stories
  • What kind of staff?
  • Does Management have a stake in the community, or
    does leadership rotate in and out.

39
Problems
  • Blaming the Messenger
  • The Watchdog Function
  • Bad News Only Myth
  • Media Truth
  • Bias

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Robert Kennedy Assassination
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Robert Kennedy Assassination
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Photo vs Graphic
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Warships await signal for attack - 1944
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Awaiting Escape in Germany - 1940
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Advertising - 1944
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Advertising - 1944
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Advertising - 1944
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Advertising - 1944
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Advertising - 1944
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Advertising - 1944
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Advertising - 1944
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Want Ads- 1944
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Want Ads - 1944
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Want Ads - 1944
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Want Ads - 1944
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Want Ads - 1944
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Want Ads - 1944
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Want Ads - 1944
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Want Ads - 1944
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