broadcast journalism

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6.354 documents for broadcast journalism
  • The consumption end of the equation was led by a generation of key-punching teens who reduced all long-hand creations to software that did a lot of the work for them, thus creating the opportunity to pack many different tasks into fewer efforts. Because of this behavior, widely adopted by teens faster than their elders, teens were mistakenly viewed as having a special ability to efficiently "multitask," that is, split their attentional resources efficiently among a number of competing tasks. Conveying to American students the lineage of media law and ethics, as it derives from the First Amendment and decades of American media patterns and practice that have been built around the First Amendment, could easily spin out several semesters of courses alone.

  • The careers, mottos, mentors, quirks and ambitions of 12 industry starlets are examined. These individuals represent exceptional talent across the gamut of medical marketing. Some have risen quickly through the ranks, while others have formed successful companies. Kimberly Wolf, director of global cardiovascular marketing for Bristol-Myers Squibb, turned to medical marketing after she realized that she did not enjoy the lifestyle that would accompany a career in broadcast journalism. In her current role, Wolf is heavily focused on development opportunities for edifoligide for the prevention of coronary artery bypass graft failure.

  • As a broadcast journalism instructor at Missouri, KOMU sports anchor and reporter Eric Blumberg often preaches to his students the most fundamental tenet of reporting. Mike Anderson:

  • Sections of this book offer a variety of stories with themes focusing on institutional credibility and misrepresentation, including Richard Johnson's guide to locating military service, based on his service as ranking Army officer or a report on Lane Green's investigation of the mistreatment of animals that began as by-product of his volunteer service at the National Zoo. All are contained here.\n Students can benefit from the "Resources for Reporting," including related readings at the end of each chapter, as well as a "Check It Out" section, suggesting that follow-up visits, requests for documents, or a personal interview could produce meaningful results that could stimulate interest or a story idea. [...] while it does mention "Broadcast Journalism" in the title, this last book cou...

  • Rosengard reviews by Bob Edwards.

  • Various recent surveys indicate that news managers in the United States are spending, on average, from less than 1% to 4% of their annual personnel budgets on training staff.3 A significant factor contributing to a productive and responsive newsroom culture, training has numerous benefits that provide a return on investment. Becker offered a comprehensive study of formal journalism education and continues to look at students preparing to enter the field, but his work does not address what, if any, training is done after a journalist leaves school.15 One recent study indicated that local television journalists may be the most training-starved group of all, with 72% of the small-market reporters surveyed considered the orientation and training on their current jobs as only fair or poor. ...

  • PITTSBURGH, May 3 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- The Press Club of Western Pennsylvania announced the winners of the 46th annual Golden Quill Awards during an awards presentation tonight at the Sheraton Hotel, Station Square, Pittsburgh. The Golden Quills competition recognizes professional excellence in written, photographic, broadcast and online journalism in Western Pennsylvania. Winners and finalists of the 2010 Golden Quills are:

  • A Montgomery broadcaster led the pack when Marshall University's public radio station, WMUL-FM, achieved a landmark at a recent awards ceremony, while Kanawha and Putnam county students also made vital contributions to the accomplishment. Adam Cavalier of Montgomery, a Marshall master's graduate, took home the Radio Broadcast Journalist of the Year Award, Best Reporter Award, Best Sportscaster Award and Best Host Award for 2010 at the West Virginia Associated Press Broadcasters Association's broadcast journalism awards at the Fifth Quarter restaurant in Charleston June 11.

  • SALT LAKE CITY -- Landon Bench hasn't bought his textbooks yet, but he knows they won't be cheap. "I think they are ridiculous. I think they are way too high," said Bench, a senior at the University of Utah in broadcast journalism. "There's got to be tons and tons of money being made from textbooks. With school starting last week at BYU, and this week at public institutions like the University of Utah, the rising cost of college textbooks is a growing concern, especially as budget cuts have forced tuition hikes at schools statewide. The average new textbook costs $57 according to the National Association of College Stores (NACS), a professional trade association. And that's just the average -- one medical textbook on illness and insects, for example, costs $539. As students scramble to...

  • RESPONDING to a suggestion that the 50th anniversary of the launch of "The Huntley-Brinkley Report" would make a good story, the producer at another network declined, saying, "It doesn't fit our demographic. That one sentence separates today's "journalism" from that represented by Chet Huntley and David Brinkley when they began a program on NBC, Oct. 29, 1956, that would launch broadcast journalism's Golden Age. The show was the brainchild of the late Reuven Frank, whose memory will also be honored Nov. 3 in New York at a special ceremony in NBC's Studio 8-H.



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