Television News
(noun)
Television news refers to disseminating current events via the medium of television.
Examples of Television News in the following topics:
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Television News
- A news bulletin or newscast is a television program that provides updates on world, national, or local news events.
- Television news refers to disseminating current events via the medium of television.
- Television news is very image-based, showing video of many of the events that are reported.
- Television channels may provide news bulletins as part of a regularly scheduled news program.
- Less often, television shows may be interrupted or replaced by breaking news ("news flashes") to provide news updates on current or sudden events of great importance.
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Journalists
- Broadcast journalism is journalism published through the radio, the television, or the Internet.
- Television news is considered by many to be the most influential medium for journalism.
- Television journalism viewership has become fragmented due to the emergence of 24-hour cable news channels such as Cable News Network (CNN) in 1980 and Fox News Channel as well as MSNBC in the 1990s.
- This person may perform electronic news gathering (ENG) as well as a compile the script for a news bulletin with a television producer.
- Prior to the television era, radio broadcasts often mixed news with opinion and each presenter strove for a distinctive style.
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News Coverage
- Due to the commercialized context within which they work, media institutions must compete for audience interest and can often not afford to ignore an important issue which another television station, newspaper, or radio station is willing to pick up.
- In addition, the U.S. media has been accused of prioritizing domestic news over international news, as well as focusing on U.S. military action abroad over other international stories.
- American news media emphasizes more than ever the "horse race" aspects of the presidential campaign, according to a new study.
- The report examined 1,742 stories that appeared from January through May 2007 in 48 news outlets.
- Almost two-thirds of all stories in U.S. news media, including print, television, radio and online, focused on the political aspects of the campaign, while only one percent focused on the candidates' public records.
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Campaigning: Traditional Media, New Media, and Campaign Advertisements
- Campaigns seek to engage the public through traditional forms of media, such as television and the press, and more recently, social media.
- With the advent of television, TV reporters were sent to cover elections.
- President Obama's efforts to reach out through new media are credited with bringing in the support of young Americans and contributing to his 2008 victory .
- But even with the rise of new media, campaigns continue to spend hundreds of millions of dollars buying air time on television networks to put on campaign advertisements.
- Television ads have been popular because they are an effective way to reach millions of voters at once.
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Organization and Ownership of the Media
- The music and television industries recently witnessed cases of media consolidation when SONY Music Entertainment's parent company merged their music division with Bertelsmann AG's BMG to form Sony BMG.
- In the case of Sony BMG, there was a "Big Five" (now "Big Four") conglomerate of major record companies, while The CW's creation was an attempt to consolidate ratings and stand up to the "Big Four" of American television (this was despite the fact that The CW was, in fact, partially owned by CBS, one of the "Big Four").
- In television, the vast majority of broadcast and basic cable networks, over a hundred in all, are controlled by nine corporations: News Corporation (the Fox family of channels), The Walt Disney Company (which includes the ABC, ESPN and Disney brands), CBS Corporation, Viacom, Comcast (which includes the NBC brands), Time Warner, Discovery Communications, EW Scripps television, or some combination thereof (including the aforementioned The CW as well as A&E networks, which is a consortium of Comcast and Disney, ).
- The similar market structure exists for television broadcasting, cable systems, and newspaper industries, all of which are characterized by the existence of large-scale owners.
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Television Debates
- Televised debates have become an important aspect of every presidential election.
- With an estimated 70 million viewers watching, the first Kennedy-Nixon debate demonstrated the impact of this new medium.
- Televised debates were a major factor again in 1980.
- The Kennedy-Nixon debate of 1960 was the first televised presidential debate.
- Name three key moments in the history of televised presidential debates
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Issue Voting
- In a commercialized media context, the media can often not afford to ignore an important issue which another television station, newspaper, or radio station is willing to pick up.
- The media may be able to create new issues by reporting and should that should be considered seriously.
- It is difficult to see, for instance, how an issue which is a major story to one television station could be ignored by other television stations.
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Political Advertisements
- Eisenhower was the first candidate to extensively utilize television commercials, creating forty twenty-second spots to answer questions from everyday Americans.
- Kennedy - utilized television, although Kennedy's televised speech about his Catholic heritage and American religious tolerance is considered by many to be more memorable.
- The growth of cable television networks heavily influenced political advertising in the 1992 election between incumbent President George H.
- Bush and Governor Bill Clinton, particularly in reaching new target demographics such as women and young voters.
- Summarize the development of political advertisements on television and the Internet
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Regulation of the Media
- Media of the United States consists of television, radio, cinema, newspapers, magazines, and Internet-based Web sites.
- News Corporation, Time Warner, Viacom and CBS Corporation round out the top 5.
- Media of the United States consists of television, radio, cinema, newspapers, magazines, and Internet-based Web sites.
- Critics allege that local news, media spending and coverage have suffered as a result of media concentration.
- News Corporation, Time Warner, Viacom and CBS Corporation round out the top 5.
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Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission
- The nonprofit group Citizens United wanted to air a film critical of Hillary Clinton and to advertise the film during television broadcasts in apparent violation of the 2002 Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act.
- By early 2008, it sought to run television commercials to promote its latest political documentary, Hillary: The Movie, and to air the movie on DirecTV.
- The movie was highly critical of then-Senator Hillary Clinton, with the District Court describing the movie as an elongated version of a negative 30-second television spot.
- In January 2008, the United States District Court for the District of Columbia ruled that the television advertisements for Hillary: The Movie violated the BCRA restrictions of "electioneering communications" within 30 days of a primary.
- On January 27, 2010, President Barack Obama condemned the decision during the 2010 State of the Union Address, stating that, "Last week, the Supreme Court reversed a century of law to open the floodgates for special interests — including foreign corporations — to spend without limit in our elections. " Moreover, The New York Times stated in an editorial, "The Supreme Court has handed lobbyists a new weapon.