newspaper - ANSWER publication that contains information about current events, features on different topics and advertisements
penny press - ANSWER newspapers that were named after the cost, 1 cent
inverted pyramid
...
newspaper - ANSWER publication that contains information about current events, features on different topics and advertisements
penny press - ANSWER newspapers that were named after the cost, 1 cent
inverted pyramid - ANSWER journalism style that puts the most important facts in the first paragraph
yellow journalism - ANSWER mid-1890s journalism that represented sensationalism, screaming headlines and cheap melodrama
muckraking - ANSWER the beginning of investigative journalism; journalists took on the role of promoting social responsibility investigating corruption, especially in big business, social institutions and politics
muckraker - ANSWER a journalist who investigated corruption, especially in big business, social institutions and politics
First Amendment - ANSWER the First Amendment to the Constitution, which provides the rights to free speech and free press
censorship - ANSWER the prevention, or attempted prevention, of printing or broadcasting materials that are considered by some to be objectable
mass media - ANSWER refers to all the channels of communication that reach a large audience
Golden Age of Radio - ANSWER refers to the 1930s when Americans listened to radios for music, drama, comedy, variety shows and news
network - ANSWER a group of stations that broadcasts the same programs at the same time
Web logs (blogs) - ANSWER Internet journals written by reporters with specialty fields or interests; blogs also may be written by citizen journalists
multiple platforms - ANSWER the news organization has both a print publication and an Internet site; media through which consumers obtain news, such as through newspapers and news magazines, television, radio, and the Internet
multiple media - ANSWER may include print, broadcast and Internet; adding audio and video elements to a print story
convergence - ANSWER merging of media and platforms
journalist - ANSWER the reporters, editors, photographers, producers and camera crews who sift through the many happenings of a day to tell you what's important or interesting
journalism - ANSWER the business of news-gathering and reporting
objective - ANSWER to keep an open mind and report both sides of an issue
reporter - ANSWER a journalist who gathers facts and prepares information to send out by mass media to the people who will read or listen to it; also called a correspondent
correspondent - ANSWER a journalist who gathers facts and prepares information to send out by mass media to the people who will read or listen to it; also called a reporter
source - ANSWER a person who supplies reporters with information
gatekeeper - ANSWER editors, producers, publishers and other managers who decide what will get into the paper, onto the Web site or onto the nightly news broadcast
ethics - ANSWER the moral principals that govern the appropriate conduct for individuals and organizations
accuracy - ANSWER getting all the facts right and always seeking the truth
credibility - ANSWER a reputation for being right; credible news organizations and their employees strive to be fair and independent, that is, free from the influence of government, businesses or individuals
influence - ANSWER
integrity - ANSWER
anonymous sources - ANSWER
transparency - ANSWER
on the record - ANSWER
impartial - ANSWER
conflict of interest - ANSWER
plagiarism - ANSWER
fabrication - ANSWER
public official - ANSWER
precedent - ANSWER
public figure - ANSWER
libel - ANSWER
invasion of privacy - ANSWER
shield laws - ANSWER
freedom of information laws - ANSWER
sunshine laws - ANSWER
multiplatform - ANSWER
storyboard - ANSWER
videographer - ANSWER
copy editor - ANSWER
posts - ANSWER
information center - ANSWER
citizen journalism - ANSWER
open-source reporting - ANSWER
circulation - ANSWER
online journalism - ANSWER
storyboarding - ANSWER
sidebar - ANSWER
beat - ANSWER
general assignment - ANSWER
hard news - ANSWER
soft news - ANSWER
enterprise reporting - ANSWER
breaking news - ANSWER
profile - ANSWER
pitching - ANSWER
tipping point - ANSWER
jargon - ANSWER language that pertains to one's business
interview - ANSWER
deadline - ANSWER
primary source - ANSWER
quotation - ANSWER
secondary source - ANSWER
unnamed source - ANSWER
off the record - ANSWER
on background - ANSWER
confidential source - ANSWER
anecdote - ANSWER
open-ended question - ANSWER
phoner - ANSWER
Q and A (question and answer) - ANSWER
read-back - ANSWER
central point - ANSWER
Five W's and an H - ANSWER
summary lead - ANSWER
wire service - ANSWER
Linotype - ANSWER
copy - ANSWER
Associated Press style - ANSWER
narrative style - ANSWER
hourglass style - ANSWER
focus style - ANSWER
nut graph - ANSWER
kicker - ANSWER
content editors - ANSWER
copy editors - ANSWER
managing editors - ANSWER
executive editor - ANSWER
news meetings - ANSWER
coaching - ANSWER
coaching editors - ANSWER
culture - ANSWER
Wikipedia - ANSWER
team - ANSWER
bios - ANSWER
team leader - ANSWER
quotation marks - ANSWER
direct quotation - ANSWER
indirect quotation - ANSWER
jargon - ANSWER vocabulary that relates to a particular field
partial quotation - ANSWER
sound bite - ANSWER
ellipses - ANSWER
offensive language - ANSWER
redundant - ANSWER
dialogue - ANSWER
attribution - ANSWER
in-depth reporting - ANSWER
investigative reporting - ANSWER
Pulitzer Prize - ANSWER
issue reporting - ANSWER
general in-depth reporting - ANSWER
documents - ANSWER
data - ANSWER
diverse sources - ANSWER
FOIA - ANSWER
computer-assisted reporting - ANSWER
structure - ANSWER
transition - ANSWER
visual journalism - ANSWER
design - ANSWER
points of entry - ANSWER
breakout box - ANSWER
sidebar - ANSWER
chart - ANSWER
locator maps - ANSWER
informational graphics - ANSWER
caption - ANSWER
primary headline - ANSWER
secondary headline - ANSWER
package - ANSWER
layout - ANSWER
anchored - ANSWER
banner - ANSWER
ears - ANSWER
navigate - ANSWER
hierarchy - ANS
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