A news program, news show, or newscast is a regularly scheduled radio or Television programme that reports current events. A news program can include live or recorded interviews by field reporters, expert opinions, opinion poll results, and occasional editorial content.
News programmes aim to provide a broader view of the day’s news, summarizing the best stories of the day instead of the hour. Length usually ranges from 20 to 60 minutes. Items are generally longer and more detailed than those in a bulletin and more sophisticated, using actualities or film footage, stills and graphics. Some shorter stories may also be incorporated to increase the breadth of coverage. If a programme is to gain audience loyalty, it will have to establish a clear identity and have a greater balance and variety of material than a bulletin.
Presentation was presented by the student of Replica, Mass comm departrment.
Supervisor and resourse person: M Ahmad Sheikh Ex. Deputy Controller, Head of National Broadcasting Service. Lahore. Pakistan
Everything we need to know about the radio program format - Interview.
This focuses primarily on interviews in radio, although it can be applied in other on air interviews too.
Looking at how social media is influencing the way we consume news, who can produce and publish news and how these new platforms are influencing journalistic practices
A news program, news show, or newscast is a regularly scheduled radio or Television programme that reports current events. A news program can include live or recorded interviews by field reporters, expert opinions, opinion poll results, and occasional editorial content.
News programmes aim to provide a broader view of the day’s news, summarizing the best stories of the day instead of the hour. Length usually ranges from 20 to 60 minutes. Items are generally longer and more detailed than those in a bulletin and more sophisticated, using actualities or film footage, stills and graphics. Some shorter stories may also be incorporated to increase the breadth of coverage. If a programme is to gain audience loyalty, it will have to establish a clear identity and have a greater balance and variety of material than a bulletin.
Presentation was presented by the student of Replica, Mass comm departrment.
Supervisor and resourse person: M Ahmad Sheikh Ex. Deputy Controller, Head of National Broadcasting Service. Lahore. Pakistan
Everything we need to know about the radio program format - Interview.
This focuses primarily on interviews in radio, although it can be applied in other on air interviews too.
Looking at how social media is influencing the way we consume news, who can produce and publish news and how these new platforms are influencing journalistic practices
This presentation, delivered to journalism students in the UK, is all about how journalists need to think differently about their careers in the future.
I outline 10 creative new ways for journalists to make money.
More details: www.nextgenerationjournalist.com
How to understand your interviewee and why they may be willing to talk to you. Written for journalism students preparing for a career in broadcasting or publishing.
Social Media & Journalism - El Escorial 2010Adam Westbrook
A talk delivered to students and journalists at the ServiMedia summer school in El Escorial, Spain July 2010.
I reveal how I owe much of my current work to social media from blogging to tweeting; and demonstrate how by writing highly targeted high value content I was able to increase my hits.
I discuss Charlie Beckett's ideas on Networked Journalism and 'the end of fortress journalism' and offer students practical tips on how to
"In difficulty lies opportunity"
I'm revealing ten new ways for journalists to do what they love and make money, in the face of the digital revolution and the economic downturn.
In this shortened presentation, delivered to journalism students at Kingston University, I briefly explain five of them.
Future of journalism online & mobile mediastereodan
Online and Mobile Media Presentation : Week 12, The Future of Journalism.
Examination of the Future of Journalism with reference to this weeks readings:
Conboy, M & Steel, j 2008 ‘The Future of Newspapers: historical perspectives,’ Journalism Studies, vol. 9, no. 5, pp. 650-661
Life in the Clickstream: The Future of Journalism [www.alliance.org.au/documents/foj_report_final.pdf ]
1. Summary of the way newspapers (up until now) have combined economic, technological and cultural issues to represent systems of shared beliefs through differentiation.
2. How news/debates about “information society” should be considered a continuation of socio-economic trends emerging in the 17th Century.
3. Debates on how current trends (“hyper-differentiation”) might impact on the political formations of the future.
Journalism in the 21st Century conference - Melbourne University - July 2009.
Plenary session: Journalism in the new digital age - New Directions for National and International media outlets.
An awesome slide show with perfect examples for all the key concepts in Visual Culture. Prepared by a faculty of Christ University, credited in the slides itself. Would be really helpful for all students of Visual Culture and Film Studies.
This training module has been written for journalism students preparing for a career in the media. It is written using material from The News Manual and Media Helping Media.
Great report about some interesting trends regarding new media, social networking and future web.
To download and get further info about the authors go to;
http://www.urban-lifestyle.se/
To download;
http://www.urbanlifestylereport.com
Metanomics is a weekly Web-based show on the serious uses of virtual worlds. This transcript is from a past show.
For this and other videos, visit us at http://metanomics.net.
Journalistic Stereotypes
Essay on Objectivity in Journalism
Essay on journalism
My Interest In Journalism
Essay about Objectivity in Journalism
Why Is Journalism Important? Essay
Journalism Bias
Una lezione al Master in Giornalismo Iulm. Innovazione, social media, newsletter, ritorno della carta, boom di Snapchat: come stanno cambiando i periodici storici online e cosa fanno quelli appena nati, per trovare e mantenere un posto in un mondo dove non esiste più la periodicità, ma il flusso
31052024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdfFIRST INDIA
Find Latest India News and Breaking News these days from India on Politics, Business, Entertainment, Technology, Sports, Lifestyle and Coronavirus News in India and the world over that you can't miss. For real time update Visit our social media handle. Read First India NewsPaper in your morning replace. Visit First India.
CLICK:- https://firstindia.co.in/
#First_India_NewsPaper
01062024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdfFIRST INDIA
Find Latest India News and Breaking News these days from India on Politics, Business, Entertainment, Technology, Sports, Lifestyle and Coronavirus News in India and the world over that you can't miss. For real time update Visit our social media handle. Read First India NewsPaper in your morning replace. Visit First India.
CLICK:- https://firstindia.co.in/
#First_India_NewsPaper
03062024_First India Newspaper Jaipur.pdfFIRST INDIA
Find Latest India News and Breaking News these days from India on Politics, Business, Entertainment, Technology, Sports, Lifestyle and Coronavirus News in India and the world over that you can't miss. For real time update Visit our social media handle. Read First India NewsPaper in your morning replace. Visit First India.
CLICK:- https://firstindia.co.in/
#First_India_NewsPaper
‘वोटर्स विल मस्ट प्रीवेल’ (मतदाताओं को जीतना होगा) अभियान द्वारा जारी हेल्पलाइन नंबर, 4 जून को सुबह 7 बजे से दोपहर 12 बजे तक मतगणना प्रक्रिया में कहीं भी किसी भी तरह के उल्लंघन की रिपोर्ट करने के लिए खुला रहेगा।
role of women and girls in various terror groupssadiakorobi2
Women have three distinct types of involvement: direct involvement in terrorist acts; enabling of others to commit such acts; and facilitating the disengagement of others from violent or extremist groups.
हम आग्रह करते हैं कि जो भी सत्ता में आए, वह संविधान का पालन करे, उसकी रक्षा करे और उसे बनाए रखे।" प्रस्ताव में कुल तीन प्रमुख हस्तक्षेप और उनके तंत्र भी प्रस्तुत किए गए। पहला हस्तक्षेप स्वतंत्र मीडिया को प्रोत्साहित करके, वास्तविकता पर आधारित काउंटर नैरेटिव का निर्माण करके और सत्तारूढ़ सरकार द्वारा नियोजित मनोवैज्ञानिक हेरफेर की रणनीति का मुकाबला करके लोगों द्वारा निर्धारित कथा को बनाए रखना और उस पर कार्यकरना था।
In a May 9, 2024 paper, Juri Opitz from the University of Zurich, along with Shira Wein and Nathan Schneider form Georgetown University, discussed the importance of linguistic expertise in natural language processing (NLP) in an era dominated by large language models (LLMs).
The authors explained that while machine translation (MT) previously relied heavily on linguists, the landscape has shifted. “Linguistics is no longer front and center in the way we build NLP systems,” they said. With the emergence of LLMs, which can generate fluent text without the need for specialized modules to handle grammar or semantic coherence, the need for linguistic expertise in NLP is being questioned.
2. about me:
reporter & newsreader for Viking FM
multimedia journalist
Blogger! www.adamwestbrook.co.uk
Twitterererer! @AdamWestbrook
3. The decline of journalism: in numbers
Decline of journalism:
The average fleet street hack supplies 300% more content than they did in 19
July 2008-January 2009: 4,000 job losses in media; 1,000 of them journalists
54% of content in newspapers is from PR companies
60 local papers have closed in the last few months
Source: The Investigations Fund
www.investigationsfund.org
5. why are newspapers, tv and radio struggling?
TV satellite, youtube
Radio iPods, spotify, podcasts
Newspapers the internet
loss of classifieds
free news content The internet has had a massive impact on
loss of advertisers traditional media.
For newspapers the real killer hasn't been the
loss of advertisers so much as the rise of
Craigslist, Gumtree and the free classifieds.
7. Robert G Picard's argument in “Why journalists deserve low pay” in Christian
Science Monitor
Has journalism lost its value?
In the past journalism had three economic values:
Journalists were experts in things the public were not
Journalists had access to people the public did not
Journalists had a monopoly over the distribution of news
8. Has journalism lost its value?
In the past journalism had three economic values:
Journalists were experts in things the public were not
Journalists had access to people the public did not
Journalists had a monopoly over the distribution of news
no long have exclusive access to people the public don't...and they definitely do not hav
9. My point here:
journalism is at a
crossroads.
The way behind us
is no longer viable.
But the road ahead
is uncertain too.
We're all clumped
in the middle
arguing about
where to go next.
11. What will the reporter of the future be like?
Blogger
12. What will the reporter of the future be like?
Blogger
Photographer
13. What will the reporter of the future be like?
Blogger
Photographer
Film maker
14. What will the reporter of the future be like?
Blogger
Photographer
Film maker
Web designer
15. What will the reporter of the future be like?
Blogger
Photographer
Film maker
Independent/freelance
Web designer
16. What will the reporter of the future be like?
Blogger
Photographer
More than a
journalist
Film maker
Independent/freelance
Web designer
17. What will the reporter of the future be like?
Blogger
Entrepreneur
Photographer
More than a
journalist
Film maker
Independent/freelance
Web designer
18. Video Journalism
Explosion in online video
Training newspaper journalists to be video journalists
TV stations run like newspapers
More journalists
More stories
Less money!
Introducing the Michael Rosenblum model for running TV newsrooms like
newspapers.
19. Video Journalism
No cameramen
No sound crews
No editors
No producers
No office
No rent
No PA
No managers
No senior managers
No assistant producers
Introducing the Michael Rosenblum model for running TV newsrooms like
newspapers.
20. Hyper-local journalism
Perceived demand for ultra local news: what's going on on
your street.
Run by amateurs, bloggers on free software
Success stories:
Kings Cross Local Environment
Digbeth Is Good
And now professional newspapers getting in on the action.
24. n't profitable; it's subsidised by other Murdoch enterprises.
an isn't profitable; it's funded by a trust.
sn't profitable.”
Emily Bell, The Guardian
Source: Paul Bradshaw Online Journalism Blog
25. The three types of journalism
we’ll always pay for
Business
Sport
Showbiz
26. An example of recent online scoops over traditional media...
But TMZ uses old hack tricks (paying for info) and is owned by ...Time Warner!
27. Letter from a scared journalist
Dear Cary,
I spent the last four and a half years studying print journalism in college and watching vacantly as the
newspaper industry crumbled before my eyes. The decline never bothered me. I always figured I had
what it takes to get a job even in an extremely competitive market: Before I ever graduated, I had
completed four internships at newspapers, magazines and a Web site, published almost a hundred clips
(including longer, high-quality pieces), and left a good impression with everyone I worked with. I knew I
wanted to be a journalist, and I knew that I wanted to write for a living.
Now, six months after graduating, my parents still pay my cellphone bill and I am working full-time
making ice cream. I make a couple hundred bucks here and there freelancing for a magazine I interned
at, but otherwise my “freelance” career, as well as my journalism career, is dead in the water.
What I see is that my passion for journalism and writing is waning.
I am looking into jobs in other fields that pay better. Is it healthier to stick it out working at an ice cream
store and desperately try to make it as a writer, or should I pursue a career where financial security is
more realistic?
Scared Journalist
28. Letter from a scared journalist
Dear Scared Journalist,
If you are a true journalist, the world is going to kick your ass. If you are a true journalist, you are
supposed to be having a hard time. This is how the world makes writers. It kicks their ass long enough
that they start finally telling the truth.
We have applied and applied and applied for jobs and gotten nothing, and then things have been
dropped at our feet that we were not sure we wanted but which we accepted because there was nothing
else available....
And then, with the irony that cloaks us against utter nihilism, we think, if only we were living in more
interesting times! And that is the confounding thing about it, isn’t it? That we stand on the nodal point of
a great, creaking, crunching change in historical direction, at the beginning of cataclysmic planetary
collapse, at the dying of civilization, at the rising of new empires, at our own meltdown, as a million
stories bloom out of the earth like wildflowers in the spring and we think, gee, uh, if only there were
some good stories to tell.
That’s the ultimate irony, no? That in the midst of remarkable and unprecedented change, in the midst of
the greatest stories to happen all century, we are paralyzed by some changes in the delivery system.
It’s a weird world but it’s interesting and fun. Fuck the little stuff. Don’t worry about your career. Find a
story and write about it, and stay off the streets if you’re drunk.