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The Elements of Journalism: What Newspeople…
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The Elements of Journalism: What Newspeople Should Know and the Public… (2001)

by Bill Kovach

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The Elements of Journalism focuses on the elements of journalism: telling the truth, making legal, moral and ethical decisions during journalistic work and how journalists deal with those decisions. Anybody who claims the media has a 'bias' should read The Elements of Journalism, as that myth is thoroughly debunked. The ideals of journalism-- tell the truth, be accurate and honest-- are presented in this book. ( )
  06nwingert | Jan 17, 2010 |
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As anthropologists began comparing notes on the world's few remaining primitive cultures, they discovered something unexpected.
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Amazon.com Amazon.com Review (ISBN 0609806912, Paperback)

These are tough times for journalism. Newsroom executives' bonuses tend to be based on their company's profit margin. Journalists are constantly jockeying for the time and space necessary to tell their stories as they see fit. Only 47 percent of Americans even read a newspaper. And Time and Newsweek--news magazines, remember?--"were seven times more likely to have the same cover story as People magazine in 1997 than in 1977."

It's no wonder that in 1997, the Committee of Concerned Journalists formed to "engage journalists and the public in a careful examination of what journalism was supposed to be." The Elements of Journalism reports the results of that study, which included 21 public forums (attended by 3,000 people), in-depth interviews with 100 journalists, editorial content studies, and research into the history of journalism. Part of what the committee members learned, they already knew. Journalism is complicated business: journalists are paid by management but work for the citizens; they tend to be self-taught (there is little evidence of mentoring and much disdain for journalism schools); and they need to be objective even when they're not impartial. This has always been the case. But the committee also detected a trend, one abundantly evident to anyone who has tried to find news on the evening TV news: "news was becoming entertainment and entertainment news."

"Unless we can grasp and reclaim the theory of a free press," warn Bill Kovach and Tom Rosenstiel, the book's authors, "journalists risk allowing their profession to disappear." Through their discussions with journalists, the Committee of Concerned Journalists defined nine "clear principles" of journalism, which Kovach and Rosenstiel explore in great detail. The first principle is, "Journalism's first obligation is to the truth." The last: "Its practitioners must be allowed to exercise their personal conscience." In between come issues of loyalty, verification, independence, and power monitoring, among others.

Invigorating reading for newsroom interns, jaded reporters, and anyone else who needs to be reminded of the rigorousness, integrity, and meaning of journalism. --Jane Steinberg

(retrieved from Amazon Tue, 08 Jan 2013 09:06:09 -0500)

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Identifies the essential elements of journalism and its role in our society.

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