This document discusses how members of Congress use their official websites to attract traditional media coverage. It finds that about three-quarters of members explicitly employ their websites for this purpose. Websites provide features to make them "media friendly," including press releases, photos from events, summaries of issues, and contact information for journalists. While the internet allows direct communication, members still seek traditional media coverage for its legitimacy and to reach audiences outside their districts. Journalists also use congressional websites as a research tool to supplement their reporting.
Introduction to hyper-local media, part three: issues, challenges and futureg...Damian Radcliffe
12" pack broken into three, due to file size. This is part three, which looks at the issues, challenges and opportunities for the sector. It also involves some future gazing. Comments, feedback and suggestions are very welcome.
Understanding and Implementing Innovation in News Media and JournalismDamian Radcliffe
It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a media company in possession of a good fortune (an audience, brand recognition and decent revenues), must (still) be in want of innovation.
The pace of change in our industry means that even the biggest, most successful, companies need to continually innovate, refresh and reinvent what they do and how they do it. Those who don’t risk being left behind, overtaken by digital upstarts, or blown away by more established players with deeper pockets and a longer transformational runway.
I asked 10 experts — leading media practitioners, researchers and scholars around the world — for their insights around what constitutes innovation, the barriers to implementing it, and how to overcome these roadblocks.
--
This report is based on a series of in-depth email interviews with ten leading media practitioners, researchers and scholars around the world.
It would not have been possible without the thoughtful and insightful contributions provided by Federica Cherubini, Professor Lucy Kueng, Joon-Nie Lau, Nic Newman, Rishad Patel, Professor Devadas Rajaram, Thomas Seymat, Professor Jane Singer, Patricia Torres-Burd and Dr. Gillian Youngs.
The report was produced as part of the Journalism Breakthroughs project, The Center for Media, Data and Society (CMDS); a research center for the study of media, communication, and information policy and its impact on society and practice.
Introduction to hyper-local media, part three: issues, challenges and futureg...Damian Radcliffe
12" pack broken into three, due to file size. This is part three, which looks at the issues, challenges and opportunities for the sector. It also involves some future gazing. Comments, feedback and suggestions are very welcome.
Understanding and Implementing Innovation in News Media and JournalismDamian Radcliffe
It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a media company in possession of a good fortune (an audience, brand recognition and decent revenues), must (still) be in want of innovation.
The pace of change in our industry means that even the biggest, most successful, companies need to continually innovate, refresh and reinvent what they do and how they do it. Those who don’t risk being left behind, overtaken by digital upstarts, or blown away by more established players with deeper pockets and a longer transformational runway.
I asked 10 experts — leading media practitioners, researchers and scholars around the world — for their insights around what constitutes innovation, the barriers to implementing it, and how to overcome these roadblocks.
--
This report is based on a series of in-depth email interviews with ten leading media practitioners, researchers and scholars around the world.
It would not have been possible without the thoughtful and insightful contributions provided by Federica Cherubini, Professor Lucy Kueng, Joon-Nie Lau, Nic Newman, Rishad Patel, Professor Devadas Rajaram, Thomas Seymat, Professor Jane Singer, Patricia Torres-Burd and Dr. Gillian Youngs.
The report was produced as part of the Journalism Breakthroughs project, The Center for Media, Data and Society (CMDS); a research center for the study of media, communication, and information policy and its impact on society and practice.
A number of research papers have documented the rapid success and growth of minority or ethnic media across a number of areas throughout the world, being most prominent in Western Europe and North America. This trend has been attributed by scholars with the tendency of expressing the increased patterns of migration across the globe (Bloomsbury 1992). A crucial awareness about an extremely participatory culture of global media across multi- cultural societies has been established as a significant tool for explaining the impact and success of minority or ethnic media, along with embracing the changing methods by which there is use of media by people (Sanders 2009). Being a profession extremely centralized to the sense of self across the society, there lies a crucial significance for understanding the impacts of changing conditions on labour, cultures of professionalism, and the technologies in appropriation. These factors form the crucial attribute of work within the profession of journalism. It has been argued by a number of researchers that the continuously converging technologies undermine the basic standards and skills of journalism, while the so- called multiple tasking is fostered within newsrooms, which is seen as the outcome of economy based pressures cutting back over resources while the work loads are increased (Curran et al. 2012).
In the current society where development has been taking place at a fast pace, a large number of people turn to their electronic devices that range from Social Media to predictions of weather (Curran 2010). As websites of social networking has been exploding and smart phones have been development, technology has quickly started to become the key way in order to receive information. The dependence on new technology for information have been providing huge benefits such as instant notification of emails and news allowing member of the society for being aware about what events are taking place across the globe in only a fraction of seconds.
The Impact of COVID-19 on Journalism in Emerging Economies and the Global SouthDamian Radcliffe
This report explores the untold story of how the COVID crisis has impacted on journalists – and journalism - in Emerging Economies and the Global South. It’s a story told not only through the insights of industry leaders, advocates and media experts – but critically, through the voices of the journalists themselves, too often unheard or silenced. It is the first report of its kind to bring together both fact-based data and first-hand experience with this regional focus.
Taking a deep dive into the critical challenges faced by the profession, the report examines issues including the pandemic’s impact on the personal safety and welfare of journalists, the structure of newsrooms and disruption to business models, the proliferation of fake news, and surging threats to media freedom. The study also identifies best practice and innovative approaches that have been developed as a response to the challenges of COVID-19.
Contributing alumni from TRF’s journalism training programmes span 26 countries, sharing their own experiences to illustrate the reality of journalism outside of North America and Western Europe.
First published by the Thomson Reuters Foundation on 14th January 2021 at http://covid-report.trust.org/
Public Scholarship Workshop - Tips and Tricks for AcademicsDamian Radcliffe
Workshop for Center for Latina/o and Latin American Studies at the University of Oregon on public scholarship, exploring why this matters, how you can engage in public scholarship (including areas of potential engagement) and tips for implementation.
The latest report titled: State of the Newsroom 2017 – Fakers and Makers, looks at job placement in the newsroom, fake news, fact checking and threats to media freedom.
Traditional Media Versus New Social Media Differences, Impact And OutcomeMyAssignmenthelp.com
Struggling to understand the difference between traditional media and new social media? Read this blog written by our experts to know what’s best for the current market. For more info visit: https://myassignmenthelp.com/blog/traditional-media-versus-new-social-media-differences-impact-and-outcome/
Local Newspapers: trends and developments in the USADamian Radcliffe
Slides of keynote on US local newspapers given at the 6th International Conference of proximity media, Barcelona, 21st November 2017. http://jornades.amic.media/default.php?id=3065
It was a humble presentation we had today together ;narjes and i did our best to make sure that every body is acknowledged and satisfied...I honestly thank my teacher, partner and all my true freinds
A number of research papers have documented the rapid success and growth of minority or ethnic media across a number of areas throughout the world, being most prominent in Western Europe and North America. This trend has been attributed by scholars with the tendency of expressing the increased patterns of migration across the globe (Bloomsbury 1992). A crucial awareness about an extremely participatory culture of global media across multi- cultural societies has been established as a significant tool for explaining the impact and success of minority or ethnic media, along with embracing the changing methods by which there is use of media by people (Sanders 2009). Being a profession extremely centralized to the sense of self across the society, there lies a crucial significance for understanding the impacts of changing conditions on labour, cultures of professionalism, and the technologies in appropriation. These factors form the crucial attribute of work within the profession of journalism. It has been argued by a number of researchers that the continuously converging technologies undermine the basic standards and skills of journalism, while the so- called multiple tasking is fostered within newsrooms, which is seen as the outcome of economy based pressures cutting back over resources while the work loads are increased (Curran et al. 2012).
In the current society where development has been taking place at a fast pace, a large number of people turn to their electronic devices that range from Social Media to predictions of weather (Curran 2010). As websites of social networking has been exploding and smart phones have been development, technology has quickly started to become the key way in order to receive information. The dependence on new technology for information have been providing huge benefits such as instant notification of emails and news allowing member of the society for being aware about what events are taking place across the globe in only a fraction of seconds.
The Impact of COVID-19 on Journalism in Emerging Economies and the Global SouthDamian Radcliffe
This report explores the untold story of how the COVID crisis has impacted on journalists – and journalism - in Emerging Economies and the Global South. It’s a story told not only through the insights of industry leaders, advocates and media experts – but critically, through the voices of the journalists themselves, too often unheard or silenced. It is the first report of its kind to bring together both fact-based data and first-hand experience with this regional focus.
Taking a deep dive into the critical challenges faced by the profession, the report examines issues including the pandemic’s impact on the personal safety and welfare of journalists, the structure of newsrooms and disruption to business models, the proliferation of fake news, and surging threats to media freedom. The study also identifies best practice and innovative approaches that have been developed as a response to the challenges of COVID-19.
Contributing alumni from TRF’s journalism training programmes span 26 countries, sharing their own experiences to illustrate the reality of journalism outside of North America and Western Europe.
First published by the Thomson Reuters Foundation on 14th January 2021 at http://covid-report.trust.org/
Public Scholarship Workshop - Tips and Tricks for AcademicsDamian Radcliffe
Workshop for Center for Latina/o and Latin American Studies at the University of Oregon on public scholarship, exploring why this matters, how you can engage in public scholarship (including areas of potential engagement) and tips for implementation.
The latest report titled: State of the Newsroom 2017 – Fakers and Makers, looks at job placement in the newsroom, fake news, fact checking and threats to media freedom.
Traditional Media Versus New Social Media Differences, Impact And OutcomeMyAssignmenthelp.com
Struggling to understand the difference between traditional media and new social media? Read this blog written by our experts to know what’s best for the current market. For more info visit: https://myassignmenthelp.com/blog/traditional-media-versus-new-social-media-differences-impact-and-outcome/
Local Newspapers: trends and developments in the USADamian Radcliffe
Slides of keynote on US local newspapers given at the 6th International Conference of proximity media, Barcelona, 21st November 2017. http://jornades.amic.media/default.php?id=3065
It was a humble presentation we had today together ;narjes and i did our best to make sure that every body is acknowledged and satisfied...I honestly thank my teacher, partner and all my true freinds
A theory of Media Politics was my Oral Presentation subject with Mouna Frikha at ISLG. It was a good performance and I got 18\20 which is a very excellent mark .I greatly appreciate anyone's help.
Media in Authoritarian and Populist Times: Post Covid-19 scenarioAI Publications
This paper is analytical in approach and draws various conclusions from the present-day media and its functioning. Media plays critical role in strengthening of Democracy but at the same time can be impediment also if not properly managed and given enough freedom to operate. Media is also called the fourth pillar of Democracy and gives space to criticism, dissent and questioning skill to electorate against the people in power. This paper argues that media in times of populism and authoritarianism is in for a serious overhaul and change. Media is very difficult to be found independent and working in conducive environment. Populism and authoritarians stifles dissent and criticism and manages the media in order to sell its own agenda. Post Covid-19 this phenomenon has gotten worse and the pandemic has aggravated the situation.
A content analysis of 86 citizen blog sites, 53 citizen news sites and 63 daily newspaper sites indicated that citizen journalism sites, including both news and blog sites, differed significantly from newspaper sites.
The rise of social media and its impact on mainstream journalism Victor Mambor
e rise of social media and its impact on
mainstream journalism:
A study of how newspapers and broadcasters in the UK and
US are responding to a wave of participatory social media,
and a historic shi in control towards individual consumers.
A. I need to remind the people who help me with this paper that my.docxrhetttrevannion
A. I need to remind the people who help me with this paper that my experience is not with a disabled child, but I experience with an adult disabled person.
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As you complete the assigned reading for class on April 23, please submit short answers to the Three Things to Know.
2 sentences for each of the below questions
· How does media impact what we learn, as well as the way we learn?
· How has the nature of digital media made it central to our thinking and behavior?
· How has the nature of digital media shown the potential for limits of human control of media?The Crisis in Journalism
Internet-based companies have used technology to disrupt existing industries, undermining the financial foundation for traditional journalism (Franklin 2011; Jones 2009; McChesney and Pickard 2011; Meyer 2009). Subscriptions that had once funded newspaper journalism plummeted as users flocked to “free” online content. Print advertising, which had made up the bulk of revenue for news organizations, also fled to the internet; Craigslist and eBay replaced the newspaper classified ads, whereas Google, Facebook, and online ad brokers replaced display ads. As users and advertisers moved online, publishers decided they had to follow.
Stand-alone news websites offered free online content, reinforcing the expectation that news should be available without cost. Some introduced pay walls to try to recapture some lost revenue. In the hope of finding greater readership, “distributed content” became common, where publications allowed their content to appear on Facebook and other platforms. Unfortunately, of the people who find a news story from social media, about two-thirds remember the social media site where they found it, but fewer than half remember which news outlet originally published it (Kalogeropoulos and Newman 2017). Still, publishers competed to create content that met the format and content preferences of those platforms. When Facebook research showed users engaged with video presentations more than text, the call for news outlets to “pivot to video” followed. In one example, The Washington Post, best known for its sober political coverage, began creating scripted funny videos as a way to attract more users via distributed content (Bilton 2017).
That is a change from how news organizations have operated in the past. At legacy news sites—whether the printed newspaper or online website—news organizations offer the user a package of content. Users might skim the headlines, check out the sports, and delve deep into a feature article—all from a single news outlet. That means the editorial staff at the outlets produces a well-rounded package of information and news, along with lighter lifestyle and entertainment stories. With distributed content,.
Media Re:public @ MiT6 New Media, Civic MediaPersephone Miel
24 April 2009 Presentation on Media Re:public as part of Media in Transition 6 New Media, Civic Media (panel questions)
Jessica Clark, Center for Social Media (American University)
Ellen Hume, Center for Future Civic Media (MIT)
Persephone Miel, Media Re:public and Internews Network
Respondents: Dean Jansen, Participatory Culture Foundation
Jake Shapiro, Public Radio Exchange (PRX)
Moderator: Pat Aufderheide, American University
Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 United States License
Similar to Lipinski & Neddenriep 2004 Using New Media To Get Old Media Coverage (20)
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Instructions for Submissions thorugh G- Classroom.pptxJheel Barad
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Embracing GenAI - A Strategic ImperativePeter Windle
Artificial Intelligence (AI) technologies such as Generative AI, Image Generators and Large Language Models have had a dramatic impact on teaching, learning and assessment over the past 18 months. The most immediate threat AI posed was to Academic Integrity with Higher Education Institutes (HEIs) focusing their efforts on combating the use of GenAI in assessment. Guidelines were developed for staff and students, policies put in place too. Innovative educators have forged paths in the use of Generative AI for teaching, learning and assessments leading to pockets of transformation springing up across HEIs, often with little or no top-down guidance, support or direction.
This Gasta posits a strategic approach to integrating AI into HEIs to prepare staff, students and the curriculum for an evolving world and workplace. We will highlight the advantages of working with these technologies beyond the realm of teaching, learning and assessment by considering prompt engineering skills, industry impact, curriculum changes, and the need for staff upskilling. In contrast, not engaging strategically with Generative AI poses risks, including falling behind peers, missed opportunities and failing to ensure our graduates remain employable. The rapid evolution of AI technologies necessitates a proactive and strategic approach if we are to remain relevant.
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June 3, 2024 Anti-Semitism Letter Sent to MIT President Kornbluth and MIT Cor...Levi Shapiro
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• The Committee on Education and the Workforce has been investigating your institution since December 7, 2023. The Committee has broad jurisdiction over postsecondary education, including its compliance with Title VI of the Civil Rights Act, campus safety concerns over disruptions to the learning environment, and the awarding of federal student aid under the Higher Education Act.
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Lipinski & Neddenriep 2004 Using New Media To Get Old Media Coverage
1. The Harvard International Journal of
Press/Politics
http://hij.sagepub.com
Using quot;Newquot; Media to Get quot;Oldquot; Media Coverage: How Members of Congress Utilize Their Web Sites to
Court Journalists
Daniel Lipinski and Gregory Neddenriep
The Harvard International Journal of Press/Politics 2004; 9; 7
DOI: 10.1177/1081180X03259819
The online version of this article can be found at:
http://hij.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/9/1/7
Published by:
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3. 8 Press/Politics 9(1) Winter 2004
have demonstrated the appeal and the increasing importance of this new
medium for direct mass communication by government officials, it is essential to
remember that coverage by the traditional media is still vital to these individuals.
In fact, to witness the continued importance of old media to public officials in
this new media era, we need only examine the same Web sites being used to
communicate around journalists. We demonstrate this through our analysis of
the Web sites of members of the U.S. Congress. In this article, we first reveal the
extent to which representatives explicitly use their sites to garner traditional
news coverage. Next, we show the types of features that are included on these
sites to make them “media friendly” and facilitate the work of journalists.1
Finally,we discuss some of the factors that explain the variance among legislators
in regard to the extent to which their Web sites are media friendly.
The Need for Traditional Media Coverage
by Members of Congress
Members of the U.S. Congress are usually assumed to have three main goals:
reelection, good public policy, and power (Fenno 1973). In pursuit of these
goals, especially the primary goal of reelection, legislators attempt to communi-
cate strategic messages to the public. To win reelection, they transmit messages
designed to build the support of constituents in their district/state whose votes
they need. When members pursue their policy goals, they may try to rally sup-
port for a cause by expanding the scope of conflict (Schattschneider 1960) or by
using an “outside strategy” where they encourage citizens to pressure other rep-
resentatives to endorse their legislation (Davis 1992). This requires communi-
cating to the public outside of the district/state represented to garner support
for certain policies. When pursuing policy in this manner, legislators are often
simultaneously advancing their goal of power inside the institution. The pursuit
of power on the outside involves attempting to gain support from citizens who
may vote for the representative as a candidate for a higher office such as governor
or president.
Sending messages through the news media is one important way that many
members of Congress seek to communicate with the public to achieve their
goals. Whether they seek local or national news coverage at any particular point
in time depends on the goal they are pursuing. When pursuing reelection, many
seek coverage by local news outlets because they are targeted at the member’s
constituents, and, according to some commentators, the local news coverage is
more predictable (Davis 1992) and less trenchant (Robinson 1981). It is, there-
fore,not surprising that press secretaries in the House prioritize local media out-
lets over national ones (Cook 1988; Hess 1991). While some senators may seek
coverage from national news media as they search for reelection, local news is of
critical importance. When members pursue their policy and inside power goals,
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4. Lipinski, Neddenriep / Using “New” Media 9
they will court the national media because they need to influence a larger audi-
ence. In seeking higher office, legislators may want local and/or national cover-
age depending on the office they are aspiring to win.
While communication through the news media is an efficient way to reach a
large audience, it is not an ideal method for members who are trying to get their
messages out. One problem is that members, especially those in the House,
receive little coverage from local (Vinson 2002) or national (Kimball 1994)
news media.Even when they appear in the news,they may not receive the type of
coverage that they want. The job of a journalist is not to act simply as a conduit
for officials’ messages to the public, but, instead, journalists are supposed to
mediate by choosing which stories to cover and how to cover them.2 Thus, mem-
bers have an incentive to embrace direct communication so they can control
the information that they are sending. Techniques such as mailings, member-
controlled public-access cable television programs, speeches, and other public
appearances by members are important ways that messages are communicated
in an unmediated fashion. These communication opportunities (many of which
they provide for themselves with official expenses) are sometimes credited with
giving incumbents a significant advantage when running for reelection.
Some members of Congress have little interest in using the news media to
advance policy and power goals, and they are satisfied that their direct communi-
cation does enough to virtually ensure reelection. The members who fit into this
category do not put much effort into garnering media coverage, but most mem-
bers do seek coverage because unmediated communication has some drawbacks.
First, direct communication is not very useful in sending messages to those out-
side of a member’s district/state because public funds can be spent only to facili-
tate communication with constituents.3 Second, and more important, all forms
of direct communication lack the legitimacy that is instilled when messages are
conveyed by an unbiased third party.4 Sophisticated audiences may perceive a
politician’s direct communication as self-serving, while they are more likely to
trust information coming from journalists who are ostensibly neutral. The tradi-
tional media provide members with legitimacy that they cannot achieve through
unmediated self-promotion. Thus, despite the considerable resources put into
direct communication, most members still have an incentive to put significant
effort into attracting news coverage.
Use of the Web for Communication
by Members of Congress
Since the 1990s, the Internet has provided representatives with a new way to
circumvent the news media and directly communicate with the public. The
House of Representatives joined the Internet revolution in the 103rd Congress
(1993–94) when it set up a gopher site to provide information such as “listings of
Downloaded from http://hij.sagepub.com at University of the West of Scotland on October 7, 2008
5. 10 Press/Politics 9(1) Winter 2004
members along with committee memberships and party leadership lists” (Davis
1999: 123). At the same time, a few senators established their own gopher sites.
With the Republican takeover in 1995, the House “took major strides toward
using the Internet as a tool for disseminating political information” (Davis 1999:
123). Today, every member of Congress (except one, noted below) has a Web
page that can be accessed through the House or Senate Web site and is main-
tained with official (government) funds.
A few good analyses have been performed on the content of congressional
Web sites.One of the earliest works examined Web sites that existed in 1996 and
found that members used them to advertise themselves as “attractive, approach-
able, and helpful public servants” but presented “no discussion of legislation”
(Owen et al. 1999: 25). A study conducted the following year—when many
members still did not yet have a site—explored the variance among members in
whether their office took advantage of this new technology. In this seminal work,
Adler et al. (1998) demonstrated that young Republicans representing affluent
districts had a greater likelihood of maintaining a site. However, neither senior-
ity nor vote margin were significant predictors of whether a member had a site.5
Other studies have analyzed congressional sites and rated how valuable their
content is to constituents. Two extensive studies by the Congressional Manage-
ment Foundation (2002, 2003) examined every personal, standing committee,
and leadership site and gave each a grade from A to F. The earlier study tended to
criticize the content and noted a great disparity in the quality of sites, while the
follow-up study in 2003 cited vast improvements and complemented Congress
on its remedial efforts. The cumulative grade-point average for all congressional
sites rose from 1.76 in 2002 up to 2.30 in 2003, but Republicans maintained
higher marks than Democrats in both years. These studies demonstrate that use
of this technology is still in its infancy; as would be expected, the sites are getting
better, but they have significant room for improvement.
While research on Congress and the Internet has revealed how members use
this medium as a new way to send messages to constituents, the findings show
that employment of this technology has by no means eliminated the use of some
traditional methods of direct communication. The content of the Web sites
demonstrates that mailings, speeches, and public appearances remain impor-
tant. What the Web does is enhance and expand the use of these traditional
methods. Savvy members, for instance, can advertise their upcoming appear-
ances online so the political functions they plan to attend receive more attention;
after the event, they can post carefully selected highlights—in text, audio, or
video—to convey a certain message. Newsletters that were sent through the
mail or speeches that had been carried on C-SPAN can be placed on Web sites so
that constituents have another opportunity to see them. The Internet has not
replaced these old forms of communication.
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6. Lipinski, Neddenriep / Using “New” Media 11
How the Internet Serves Journalists
While the Internet is often viewed as a threat to traditional media and hence
to journalists, it can also serve as a valuable tool in the practice of journalism. In
journalism schools today, students learn how to take advantage of the Internet
(e.g., see Callahan 2003). Most journalists have to work under tight deadlines;
they need to get a story and get it quickly. Surfing the Web can be a quick and
cost-effective way to obtain necessary information. Given that journalists report
having heavier workloads and receiving less assistance when compiling their sto-
ries (Public Relations Tactics 2000), it is not surprising that they are turning to
the Internet to ease their burdens. One recent survey conducted by the firm of
Middleberg and Ross found that 91 percent of editors at daily newspapers and
magazines reported that either they or their staff used online services to research
articles (cited in Hachigian and Hallahan 2003: 44). Similarly, a poll by the Con-
gressional Management Foundation (2002) suggests that journalists who cover
Congress rely heavily on the Internet. Almost all respondents to the survey had
visited a congressional site in the past year; most said they used such sites more
than 20 times while 35 percent indicated that they used them more than 100
times (Congressional Management Foundation 2002: 70).6
Corporations and public relations firms have acknowledged this trend among
journalists and are reaching out online by doing things such as shifting the place-
ment of their advertorials from print publications to the Internet (Brown and
Waltzer 2001). The Norman Nielsen Group recently conducted a study that
reflects corporate America’s awareness that it is important to create Web sites
that are media friendly (Coyne and Nielsen 2003). In assembling their study, the
group interviewed journalists about how they used the Web to gather informa-
tion about companies.They found respondents visited Web sites to (1) locate the
name and phone number of a contact person, (2) verify basic facts, and (3) learn
about the company’s “spin” on events (Coyne and Nielson 2003: 3). Journalists
did not frequent sites to find new stories, but they went there to fill out stories
that were already in progress. Corporations that failed to provide this informa-
tion in a simple, easy-to-access format risked not receiving the favorable cover-
age they desired. Many respondents agreed that “poor website usability could
reduce or completely eliminate their press coverage of that company” (Coyne
and Nielson 2003: 1). Journalists covering Congress are likely to visit members’
Web sites for similar reasons, but there is little empirical evidence on this point.
In the 2002 Congressional Management Foundation survey, reporters were
asked what type of information they were seeking from congressional sites. The
study found reporters were looking for press releases, photos from events, sum-
maries of national issues, lists of the members’ accomplishments, and press con-
tact information.
It is also important to recognize that Congress is covered by journalists work-
ing for a wide variety of outlets that focus on different types of news, including
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7. 12 Press/Politics 9(1) Winter 2004
national, local (to each legislator), local Washington, and specialty news (such as
trade publications). Another important distinction is between different media
such as television, radio, and print publications. Depending on the outlet for
which they work, journalists will have varying informational needs. A local jour-
nalist, for example, is likely to search congressional sites so she or he can develop
interesting local slants to national events. Such a person might be concerned
with how her or his particular representative voted, why the lawmaker voted the
way he did, and how the outcome will affect the district. In contrast, a national
journalist might try to identify which members are exceptionally active on an
issue or how one of these high-profile members reacted to a vote implicating his
cause (e.g., John McCain’s reaction to a vote affecting campaign finance). In
these instances, it is unlikely that Web sites will be the only place that journalists
will look, but a site with crucial information may mean the difference between a
representative being included or excluded from the story. Web sites usually will
not serve as the only connection between a representative and a journalist, but
they are more likely to be the motivation for the journalist to personally contact
the member or someone in the member’s office.
Analysis
We performed a content analysis of all the official Web sites maintained by
individual members of Congress in October and November of 2002. To ensure
the sites we viewed were indeed the “official” ones, we accessed them through
links posted on the House and Senate Web pages. At the time of the study, all the
members maintained such a site with the exception of Representative Jesse Jack-
son Jr. (D-IL) (who instead relies on a private site that the House neither subsi-
dizes nor regulates.)7 Employing an approach similar to that of Brown and
Waltzer (2001) and Callison (2003), we first coded each of the 531 sites for
whether it contained a section (usually a separate link) specifically labeled as
being intended for members of the news media. These “online newsrooms,”
according to some public relations firms (e.g., Vocus, Inc. 2002), are the best
way to reach journalists because they provide a wealth of news-oriented infor-
mation in an organized format. We found that members were using thirty-six
different labels to identify this section, including titles such as “Breaking News,”
“Media Services,” and “Press Gallery.”8
If an online newsroom existed, we recorded the various features placed on
that site to help journalists write a story about the member. It is important to
note that we coded only for media-friendly features found inside the online
newsrooms and disregarded those located in other areas of the Web sites. We
used this coding scheme because we were concerned with members’ overt
attempts to attract the news media rather than the inclusion of information that
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8. Lipinski, Neddenriep / Using “New” Media 13
journalists could encounter by happenstance. As one scholar put it, “Scattering
materials throughout a Web site does little to make a journalist’s life easier”
(Callison 2003: 35).
Since we believed that many members would be using their Web sites to
attract traditional media coverage, we expect a high percentage of members in
both chambers to have a section intended specifically for journalists. Our analy-
sis reveals that about three-quarters of the members (391 out of 531, or 73.6
percent) utilize online newsrooms to attract journalists. While use of this tactic
is not ubiquitous, as was mentioned previously, it has never been the case that all
members seek media coverage. Therefore, the large percentage of members
who maintain this section on their Web sites demonstrates that members still
seek news coverage and they are using their Web sites to try to garner it.
We next examined the content of these online newsrooms. Our coding
reveals that twenty-nine different features appeared within the online news-
rooms (see Table 1). Each newsroom varies to a significant extent in regard to
the number of different features available for journalists. The number found
inside any single newsroom ranged from one to fifteen. Only a handful of the
newsrooms were near the top of the distribution, with only one containing fif-
teen features followed by two with eleven features. It was much more common
for the number of features to fall somewhere toward the lower end of the range,
as members tended to rely on a small number of key items they believed would
be useful to journalists. The mean number of features inside the newsrooms was
3.38, while the median and mode were 3 and 1, respectively.In short,journalists
visiting the online newsrooms will encounter helpful materials presented in an
organized format, but they most likely will not be able to find a smorgasbord of
items.
The thirty-six different labels used for online newsrooms, the twenty-nine
assorted features within the newsrooms, and the disparity in the number of fea-
tures utilized by each member demonstrate that there is not a uniform way in
which members construct online newsrooms. One explanation for this finding
would be that members and their staffs do not have a considerable interest in
learning and providing the type of information that journalists seek. This could
lead one to question the real importance of these online newsrooms and hence
the significance of our findings. However, we are not surprised by the lack of
standardization considering the results of the Congressional Management Foun-
dation studies. Since the content designed for constituents is generally poor and
varies significantly in quality, we should expect the same for the content
intended for journalists. We suggest that this is a sign that these online news-
rooms, along with congressional Web sites in general, are still at an early stage of
development. As time goes on, we expect that staffers in congressional offices
will gain experiences that will help them find a more consistent set of features
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9. 14 Press/Politics 9(1) Winter 2004
Table 1
Features inside online newsrooms
Feature Frequency Percentage with the Feature
Press releases 377 96.4
Text of speeches 151 38.6
Columns or op-ed pieces 141 36.1
Links to other Web sites 78 19.9
Audio or video clips 64 16.4
Newsletters 59 15.1
The official photo 54 13.8
Photos of people and events 53 13.6
Press contact information 52 13.3
Articles about the member 51 13
Sign-up for online newsletters 46 11.8
The member’s biography 32 8.2
Official statements 25 6.4
Updates on recent events 23 5.9
Public appearances 18 4.6
Calendar of events or schedule 17 4.3
List of positions on issues 13 3.3
Sponsored legislation 10 2.6
Letters to colleagues 9 2.3
Reports or documents 9 2.3
Interview transcripts 8 2
List of accomplishments 5 1.3
Bills (description or text) 4 1
Online chat capability 4 1
Facts about the home district or state 4 1
Grants procured by the member 4 1
Member’s voting record 4 1
Testimony from hearings 3 0.8
Member’s committee assignments 3 0.8
that are attractive to journalists. The fact that so many offices make an effort to
have online newsrooms suggests the importance that members of Congress
already place on this new way of reaching journalists.
Looking specifically at the types of features included in online newsrooms
gives us a better understanding of how members are trying to gain news cover-
age through this medium. Our analysis demonstrates that the items inside the
newsrooms were mostly other forms of direct communication or traditional
methods of attracting journalists that had been organized and posted online (see
Table 1). This was especially true for the key items that dominated the content.
Press releases, the ubiquitous and time-tested method of gaining news coverage,
were unequivocally the most common feature found, appearing in more than 96
percent of the newsrooms. Speeches given by the member—either during a
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10. Lipinski, Neddenriep / Using “New” Media 15
public function or during official business in Congress—were a distant second
and were present in 38.6 percent of the newsrooms. Newspaper columns or op-
ed pieces written by the member rounded out the top three items and were pres-
ent 36.1 percent of the time. It was foreseeable that these items would be preva-
lent given that members have historically relied on them to garner media atten-
tion and to cultivate support among voters. Members are continuing to utilize
these mainstays, and they are trying to get more mileage out of them by posting
them online in hopes of reaping more interest from journalists.
There were only two features that we found in online newsrooms that are
dependent on new technology. One gives journalists the opportunity to sign up
to receive periodic e-mails that contain press releases, newsletters, or alerts that
might be of interest to journalists covering the member. Only forty-six mem-
bers (11.8 percent of those with online newsrooms) have Web sites that contain
such a feature, but as e-mail becomes more prevalent and accessible, it is likely to
increase in importance. The other feature that relies on Internet technology is
the opportunity to participate in online chats with the member. Only four mem-
bers make this available for journalists. Again, use of this feature may increase
with advances in technology that make this more practicable.
The overall pattern of media-friendly features found in the online newsrooms
fits with what we would expect from the use of a technology that is in an early
stage of development. Members are using the Internet to enhance the old ways
that they sought media attention, just as they are using it to enhance the old
methods of direct communication to constituents. In addition, we found wide
variance across sites in the content of the online newsrooms designed for jour-
nalists, just as others have found wide variance in the content of Web sites
intended for constituents. We expect that as this use of the Internet develops,
there will be more standardization in the newsrooms and greater use of new
technological innovations.
Our final step was to analyze a few of the factors that we believed would
explain some of the variance among legislators in regard to the level of media
friendliness of their Web sites. We tested our expectation that senators would
put more effort than House members into making their site attractive to journal-
ists. Our data show that 87 percent of senators maintained online newsrooms
while only 70.5 percent of representatives did (see Table 2). This difference
between the chambers was statistically significant (and measures of association
indicated that the strength of the relationship was fairly strong).9 Senators also
tend to put more effort into their newsrooms as measured by the greater num-
ber of features.On average,senators have 4.36 items in their newsrooms in com-
parison to 3.10 items for House members; this difference is also statistically sig-
nificant (t[389] = –5.015, p < .01).
These discrepancies between the chambers probably occur because senators
are more likely to seek news coverage and journalists are more likely to want to
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11. 16 Press/Politics 9(1) Winter 2004
Table 2
Presence of online newsrooms by chamber
House Senate Total
Online Newsroom Present % n % n % n
Yes 70.5 304 87 87 73.6 391
No 29.5 127 13 13 26.4 140
Total 100 431 100 100 100 531
Note: χ2 (1, N = 531) = 11.336, p < .01 (one-tailed); Yule’s Q = 0.473.
cover senators.Senators are more attractive to the news media because they gen-
erally have more power than representatives. This power inequality results
because there are only 100 senators (as compared to 435 House members), sen-
ators sit on more committees than representatives, and Senate rules give each of
its members a greater ability to affect the legislative process on the chamber
floor. The more power an individual has, the more attractive he or she is to the
news media. In many media markets, senators are also more likely to be attrac-
tive to journalists because their actions are relevant to all of the potential audi-
ence, as opposed to House members who may represent only a portion of the
market. In addition, senators are more likely to seek media attention; a good
number aspire to become president (outside power goal), and many seek to use
their power to move policy (policy goal). For these reasons, senators have
greater incentives to make their Web sites attractive to journalists, and journal-
ists have greater incentives to visit senators’ Web pages; this, in turn, encourages
the senators to improve their online newsrooms. In other words, a cycle based
on the unique needs of senators and journalists spurs senators to put more effort
into constructing media-friendly Web sites.
Based on prior research, we suspected that Republicans may put more effort
than Democrats into having media-friendly Web sites.While we found 76.3 per-
cent of the Republicans maintaining online newsrooms compared to 70.9 per-
cent of their Democratic counterparts,this difference was not statistically signif-
icant. Our other indicator yielded a similar finding with Republicans, on
average, displaying 3.45 items inside their online newsrooms while Democrats
typically displayed 3.31 items. When we consider the two chambers separately,
however,there is a partisan difference.Republicans in the House are significantly
more likely to have an online newsroom (75.6 percent to 65.4 percent, p < .05),
while in the Senate, Democrats are more likely to do so (94.0 percent to 79.6
percent, p < .05) (see Table 3). These findings suggest that among individual
members, Republicans are not clearly “ahead” of Democrats in using the Web to
reach journalists but that there are intrachamber partisan differences that may be
attributable to the efforts of party leaders. This result demonstrates the need for
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12. Lipinski, Neddenriep / Using “New” Media 17
Table 3
Presence of online newsrooms by party and chamber
House House Senate Senate
Republicans Democrats Republicans Democrats
Online
Newsroom
Present % n % n % n % n
Yes 75.6 167 65.4 136 79.6 39 94.0 47
No 24.4 54 34.6 72 20.4 10 6.0 3
Total 100 221 100 208 100 49 100 50
Note: For House: χ2 (1, n = 429) = 5.354, p < .05 (one-tailed); Yule’s Q = –0.242. For Senate:
χ2 (1, n = 99) = 4.504, p < .05 (one-tailed); Yule’s Q = 0.601. Independents were treated as
missing data.
further study of the technological leadership exhibited by the parties in each
chamber.
Finally, we surmised that younger members would be more likely to use new
technologies because they came of age when computers were becoming more
prevalent. Dividing all members into five age groups—younger than 40, 40 to
49, 50 to 59, 60 to 69, and older than 69—indicates that there are no remarkable
differences across these groups when comparing members’ usage of online
newsrooms. Similar evidence emerged when we looked for a connection
between age and the number of features within the newsrooms. Relying on the
same five age groups, we found that each group’s average fell somewhere
between 3.27 and 3.55 features, and a one-way ANOVA verified that the differ-
ences between these means were not statistically significant. Splitting the cham-
bers, we found similar results regarding age in the House. In the Senate, though,
there was a downward trend in the percentage of members who had an online
newsroom as we move up the age categories (see Table 4). However, the small
differences and small number of senators in each category produce results that
are not statistically significant. The lack of striking age differences perhaps
reflects the growing awareness of the importance of the Internet. It appears that
even the elder statesmen in Congress realize that their Web site has tremendous
potential as a communication tool, and they are now employing staffers who
know how to construct and maintain Web pages that reflect this.
Conclusion
The Internet has been viewed primarily as a threat to traditional news media,
but it can also complement the old media by facilitating the work of journalists.
While other scholars have shown how members of Congress take advantage of
the Internet to send unmediated messages, our analysis reveals that they also
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13. 18 Press/Politics 9(1) Winter 2004
Table 4
Presence of online newsroom by age in Senate
≤ 39 Years 40–49 Years 50–59 Years 60–69 Years ≥ 70 Years
Online
Newsroom
Present % n % n % n % n % n
Yes 0 0 91.7 11 88.6 31 86.8 33 80 12
No 0 0 8.3 1 11.4 4 13.2 5 20 3
Total 0 0 100 12 100 35 100 38 100 15
Note: χ2 (4, n = 100) = 0.564; Cramer’s V = 0.033.
recognize that this new medium can aid journalists and hence can serve as a good
medium for attracting news coverage. But use of the Web for this purpose is still
developing, as demonstrated by the wide variance in the media-friendly content
of these sites and the small number of features made available on most. Nearly all
of the items within the newsrooms were simply traditional forms of communica-
tion that had been posted online in an organized manner. This is typical usage of a
new mode of communication; as time passes, we expect we will see more
Internet-only features in online newsrooms and the uniformity across congres-
sional offices will increase.
We also were able to demonstrate some of the factors that explain the vari-
ance among members in the media friendliness of their Web sites. Our data
revealed that senators were more likely than House members to put the effort
into making their sites media friendly. This can be accounted for by the fact that
fundamental differences between the chambers result in senators’having greater
incentives to seek media coverage and journalists having more reasons to cover
senators. In contrast, we found mixed evidence for the propositions that a mem-
ber’s age and party affiliation influence his or her use of online technologies,
which may reflect the proliferation of newer technologies into our society. But
there is still more work to be done in this area, including analysis of many other
factors that may explain variation among members in their use of online news-
rooms. We are presently working on a study of the potential impact of race, gen-
der, ideology, seniority, electoral security, district median income, and leader-
ship position on the media friendliness of members’ Web sites. As time goes on,
it will be essential for scholars to continue exploring the use and development of
this important link between old and new media.
Acknowledgments
We would like to thank David Houston for his assistance on this article. Pro-
fessor Lipinski would also like to thank Paul Herrnson and the Center for
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14. Lipinski, Neddenriep / Using “New” Media 19
American Politics and Citizenship at the University of Maryland for support
during a visiting research fellowship.
Notes
1. We would like to thank Clyde Brown and Herbert Waltzer for the inspiring the idea of
applying such a measurement to political Web sites and for supplying the phrase “media
friendly.”
2. There are scholars who claim that the news media serve too much as direct conduits for rep-
resentatives rather than mediating (see Bagdikian 1974), while others provide evidence to
the contrary (see Tidmarch and Pitney 1985);we will leave those arguments aside for now.
3. For example, the congressional frank can be used only to send mail within a member’s
district/state. Also, members can spend public funds to travel back to their district/state to
give a speech, but they cannot spend this money to travel elsewhere.
4. Again, we leave aside claims that journalists shill for members of Congress.
5. Adler et al. (1998) also found that more vulnerable members were more likely to solicit
casework on their Web sites, demonstrating that content can be affected by the reelection
goal.
6. Unfortunately, both the aforementioned studies were limited in their explanatory capacity
because they either had a low response rate or an extremely small number of responses. The
Middleberg and Ross study, according to Hachigian and Hallahan (2003), mustered only a
10-percent response rate, while the Congressional Management Foundation based its con-
clusions on the responses from only thirty-one reporters.
7. Our N dropped from 535 to 531 once we took into account vacant seats and Jackson’s
unique situation.
8. The thirty-six labels revealed by our content analysis included the following: Breaking
News, Communications, For the Press, Hot News, In the News, In the Press, Issues &
News, Latest News, Media, Media Corner, Media Information, Media Services, News,
News Archive, News Briefs, Newscenter, News & Commentary, News Flash, News &
Information, News & Media, News & Press, News Room, News Stand, News Update,
News & Views, Press Box, Press Corner, Press Desk, Press Gallery, Press & More, Press &
News, Press Office, Press Room, Press Shop, Press Statements, and Recent News.
9. Even though we are considering an entire population and not just a sample, we include mea-
sures of statistical significance. We do this for two reasons: First, we want to expand the
inferences we make beyond the exact point in time when the content analysis was per-
formed; second, these measures provide a good point of comparison regarding the size of
the differences we find between populations.
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Biographical Notes
Daniel Lipinski is an assistant professor in the Department of Political Science at the University of
Tennessee. He received his Ph.D. from Duke University in 1998. He has published numerous
articles including most recently “What Happens When House Members ‘Run with Congress’?
The Electoral Consequences of Institutional Loyalty”(Legislative Studies Quarterly 2003).His book
Congressional Communication:Content and Consequence examines the strategic messages that mem-
bers of Congress send to their constituents and will be published in 2004 by the University of
Michigan Press.
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16. Lipinski, Neddenriep / Using “New” Media 21
Address: Department of Political Science, University of Tennessee, 1001 McClung Tower,
Knoxville, TN 37996-0410; phone: (865) 974-7186; fax: (865) 974-7037; e-mail: dlipinsk@
utk.edu.
Gregory Neddenriep earned his J.D. from the Cleveland-Marshall College of Law in 1999. He is
currently a doctoral candidate at the University of Tennessee where he is writing a dissertation
about how race relations within city councils affect the substantive representation of minority
interests.
Address: Department of Political Science, University of Tennessee, 1001 McClung Tower,
Knoxville, TN 37996-0410; phone: (402) 894-4897; e-mail: gneddenr@utk.edu.
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