In June, at a workshop on female foeticide in Bangalore, I learned first-hand of certain techniques of contemporary journalism. |
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The country at war catapults journalism into the spotlight like at no other time. |
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Some were from students who wanted to know which courses and qualifications you needed for a career in journalism. |
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Is this real journalism or a kind of a form of cheerleading, where everybody benefits, because it's all soft and warm and fuzzy? |
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Yet poetry journalism has not followed suit, particularly in the literary quarterlies and in general circulation organs. |
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Do people get the distinction between journalism blogs and blogs as personal diary? |
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A group of new-media journalism students blogged the conference in real time, on their laptops and with their mobile phones and video cameras. |
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His first major book mixed journalism with drama, semiotics and literary criticism. |
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We'd go on, but disputing these petty points is the quicksand of journalism. |
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When I landed a job at the STAR newspaper I thought it would be like journalism in the movies. |
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Tauzin knows the business side of journalism well, and he is friendly with most of those who represent big media companies. |
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Now many of the newspaper's young writers are hankering after careers in journalism. |
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It is time our student funded newspaper practised true journalism and not propaganda. |
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It is designed to recognise the achievements of the men and women who have shaped modern newspaper journalism. |
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The defendant newspaper commends reliance upon the ethics of professional journalism. |
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As a schoolboy in Purley he dreamt of a career in journalism as a tribute to his hero Ernest Hemingway. |
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I had my eyes on politics which I planned to enter after a brief career in journalism. |
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I took it as a sign that he was ready to retire from his career in journalism. |
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We inhabit an expanding universe of news and journalism, flowing faster and more freely than ever before. |
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I returned to general practice two years ago after a career in medical journalism. |
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The author had a long career in journalism and his final post was that of executive editor of the European. |
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The transition from print journalism to television can often be a very difficult one. |
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He qualified as a lawyer but was looking forward to a career in journalism in the family business. |
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He chose journalism as a career because he wanted to travel and wanted someone else to pay for it. |
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After working in the Ministry of Justice, he turned to writing and journalism. |
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Like most of the rest of them, Mr. Rothwell is a disgrace to the profession of journalism. |
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Why not give broadcast journalism a whirl and have your voice perk up ears all over the city? |
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Many trainees work on student newspapers or hospital radio before embarking on a career in journalism. |
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This kind of racism pervades newspaper and broadcast journalism in EU countries. |
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The answer is that it is in the nature of national newspaper journalism that it is well-paid and based in London. |
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Mr Marsh had said it was a good piece of investigative journalism which was marred by flawed reporting. |
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In the meantime, buy a copy of In Cold Blood, the best piece of extended journalism ever published. |
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He was clearly bright, personable, charming and capable of writing good journalism. |
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If this had been a serious piece of journalism, there would have been an attempt at balance. |
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Her days were spent working as a chef in a collectively run restaurant and doing bits of journalism. |
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You cannot know what effect a book or a piece of journalism will have when it goes out into the world. |
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In short it is a fantastic piece of investigative journalism and we strongly recommend a read. |
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I don't find that fiction and journalism are particularly compatible for me. |
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Most of the journalism on the internet is print journalism recycled through the major newspaper sites. |
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It is a sloppy piece of journalism which I am amused you allowed to appear on your front page. |
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It was, in short, the most commendable piece of undercover journalism on our televisions for some time. |
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It was the product of a day when the function of journalism is clear to see. |
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Personally, I think the article is shamefully biased as a piece of journalism. |
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He says Granta's mix of modern fiction and inquiring journalism is going down well. |
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He was also one of the few academics who could produce journalism better than most journalists. |
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It is a beautiful piece of journalism which will bring a tear to many a parent's eye. |
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Yet despite her desire to write more fiction, her investigative journalism continues apace. |
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It's a slice of journalism worthy of those other weekly rags, like Woman's Day. |
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This is the kind of though-provoking journalism sorely lacking in some of our more prominent rags. |
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Verily, we must be living in a golden age of journalism if the number of prize-winning rags and hacks is anything to go by. |
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You find yourself warming to the fascist rag when they indulge in top-quality journalism like this. |
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I think there is an adversarial relationship within the sports journalism business. |
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Personal mission statements can drive us and affect how we conduct daily journalism. |
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The second was why, after all these years in journalism, had I never heard of the aforesaid official? |
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Experience is what counts in so-called creative industries like journalism. |
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Forty-one is the mean age for newspaper and wire service reporters, forty-eight for those in television journalism. |
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What is lost with the passing of network TV, in other words, is the journalism of verification. |
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I received an email through the site from a young woman doing an A-level journalism course who wanted to write a story about street harassment. |
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I want to pursue a career in writing, hopefully through some form of journalism. |
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I'm sure you've seen at least one article lamenting the death of rock journalism. |
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Morris's interest in journalism was sparked by his father who would read the London newspapers aloud. |
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Cason developed his ideas about journalism during a yeasty period in the profession's academic history. |
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This article was such a pile of yellow journalism that I had sincere doubts that the flight in question actually took place. |
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Use yellow journalism to scare the public into demanding that legislators pass a law to fix the nonexistent problem. |
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There are also some yellow journalism trying to deviate from the truth, prompting accusations against them. |
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Good-natured SEPTA spokesperson Sylvana Hoyos promised to get back to us on this issue that frankly amounts to yellow journalism. |
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Now it seems to be yellow journalism, sensationalism rather than giving the facts like you and Mr. King do every night. |
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The effort is to harness the latent talent in the country in TV production, broadcast journalism and media management. |
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Closer to home, the Irish Times, once the stately ship of Irish journalism, continues to be battered by storms and controversy. |
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It can ensure transparency and accountability within parameters of responsible journalism. |
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We'll ask a living legend of broadcast journalism, Walter Cronkite, the former CBS News anchor. |
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If journalism is the first draft of history, reporters can assist the revisers by dutifully noting their sources. |
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Excellence in journalism revolves around the key concepts of transparency, accountability, objectivity and credibility. |
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I think visual journalism has been grafted onto an old production process and that the traditional newsroom marriage roles need to be redesigned. |
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Since a corporation's culture shapes the quality and range of its journalism, the danger in reducing ownership to a few leviathans seems clear. |
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The book tells of William's initiation into journalism and his adventures in the rock industry. |
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It's a lofty ideal and one which will probably remain in the ivory tower of newspaper journalism, but I would add one caveat. |
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Indeed, without a good business it would be impossible for a newspaper to do good journalism over the long haul. |
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Evidently you, your editor, and your organization do not operate under the same rules of journalism. |
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But, if he'd even toyed with the idea of defining journalism, he must have realised he would be on a loser. |
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Competitive journalism, like competitive advertising, ends in the asseveration of impossible claims. |
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I was actually assigned to study journalism and did not choose to be a journalist on my own. |
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Despite a lifelong love affair with journalism, the job just wasn't going my way. |
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Apparently, word around the rumour mill was that he used to date a journalism major who wrote a weekly column for the Atheneum. |
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There came a moment of extraordinary professional solidarity from the sachems of journalism in response. |
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It's unforgivably bad journalism, laughably poor sub-editing, and atrocious proof-reading. |
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The fifth column this week is a sad reflection of what journalism has come to. |
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Having absorbed your comments on the state of journalism, I'm turning the tables. |
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The rise of tabloid journalism, and then of Hollywood, intensified this trend. |
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True, tabloid journalism is something invariably dirty and salacious that refuses to ever consider whether what it is doing is right. |
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I came into journalism in the late 1980s at the tail end of crusader journalism. |
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At the time I considered the article a piece of ill-informed verbiage, posing as journalism. |
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He has a diploma in journalism and has published several features, stories and poetry in magazines and periodicals. |
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He has a special interest in attempting to convey academic ideas to the mainstream, perhaps through print journalism. |
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He is an undergrad student majoring in journalism at the University of Minnesota. |
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I am now a graduate student majoring in journalism at University of Missouri-Columbia. |
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At times his writing seems more like taut, elegant journalism than literary fiction. |
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Have we reached a point where journalism can be indicted for media malpractice? |
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The first was the rise of television, a centralizing medium that invited such journalism. |
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Here, the music press and music journalism in daily newspapers form the basis of scholarly accounts of works of highly variable scope. |
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After World War II, however, journalism schools multiplied, developing on a large scale in the state universities. |
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This reminds me of the yay-boo school of journalism, as perfected by my father. |
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In his spare time, he writes screeds of music journalism and analysis, as well as running his own music fanzine website. |
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There was then a re-birth of investigative journalism which immediately received widespread support, thence advertising revenue. |
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He worries also about the slow drift of journalism out of the public consciousness. |
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Before I reveal my master plan, I want to give you some insight into my journalism experience. |
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So why is a Washington think tank funneling money to universities to encourage liberal journalism? |
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In fact, it would seem that investigative journalism in the media is no longer the norm. |
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The selectivity of news is one of the most vulnerable elements of journalism. |
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It is a noteworthy exercise in vitriol, and perhaps self-aggrandizement, but it falls far short of legitimate journalism. |
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The professional culture of journalism further impedes the public's interest in elections. |
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Should a critic drop her defences in the face of soft journalism, thumbnail description and popular explanation? |
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As a consequence, American journalism makes extravagant gestures of self-justification. |
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He then spent the following three years working in journalism and merchant banking. |
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As has been pointed out, this is really a story of shoddy journalism and sensationalism, not the value of design in society per se. |
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If I wanted I could probably make an argument that journalism and sensationalism are one and the same thing. |
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He has been conducting a series of workshops around the country on wartime journalism ethics. |
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Moving from meteorology as straight science to weather as journalism means more. |
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On several occasions, for example, he condemns the toothlessness of contemporary journalism and its reluctance to hold the powerful to account. |
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This collection ought to be a set text for anyone with aspirations to humorous journalism. |
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A mix of fiction, journalism and high-quality photography, it's a world away from the usual top-shelf titles. |
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Media academics of the 60s bewailed the fact that we had little interpretive journalism. |
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To the left-wing nuts, the primary purpose of American journalism is to shill for big companies, start wars and generally undermine democracy. |
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When we come back, Tim Russert on his new book, the influence of his father and his transition from politics to big league journalism. |
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Letters to the editor and corrections are big black holes into which complaints about shoddy journalism disappear. |
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It is abhorrent and deplorable both in its shoddy journalism and blatant personal assault on our artists. |
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Members of this group have expertise in clinical medicine, research, journalism, bioethics, law, or medical editing. |
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Her first big break in journalism occurred when a triple murderer wrote to her from jail saying he liked her work. |
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Causing a shift in policy that's not based on real policy concerns but on public distastes and shudders should not be the aim of good journalism. |
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It amuses me when I hear people say they went into journalism because they are introverts who would rather watch from the sidelines. |
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The case represents an unprecedented turn of events for Internet journalism. |
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The pack journalism of Super Bowl week always has the potential to turn into a giant game of telephone. |
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Secretly I admire him but I do wonder if he is slipping sideways into journalism rather than scientific editorship. |
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But we've seen so much of this two-faced, double-standard so-called journalism that we should be used to it by now. |
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Far more serious than their sins against the basic rules of journalism is the corporate stranglehold over the major print and broadcast outlets. |
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The sins of omission are always worse than the sins of commission in journalism. |
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That's not to say that she doesn't recognise journalism shares with politics a blokey culture, nor that she is insensitive to power relations. |
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Good to know there is an organisation in Australia dedicated to uncorrupted, independent journalism. |
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I teach a class in online journalism and we'd had a long discussion about the question, so I'd been mulling it over. |
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Conflicts of interest remain a soft spot in the underbelly of politics and journalism. |
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I wrote the introduction with my best journalism cap on hoping to give an inkling of what was to come without underselling or overselling. |
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In journalism classically understood, information flows from the press to the public. |
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The late 20th century's decline of social deference has led to a journalism which is unforgiving of the elite and its deviations. |
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The hitherto unformulated idea of a profession of journalism takes shape in clauses which assume what was then becoming common form. |
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Instead, as her school days in Carraroe slipped by, she was looking for something either in journalism or art college. |
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I can't cite any similar highhandness on Woodward's part, nor is he the sort to sluice the words of authorities directly into his journalism. |
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Right up to the end, Enron was described in the exalted realms of management theory and business journalism with virtually unmodulated adoration. |
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Even judged as a piece of crusading journalism, it was curiously unpolitical. |
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While she is still undecided on her career choice, her options have been narrowed down to journalism and management. |
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At New Delhi's Triveni Art Gallery till May 29, the exhibition is a tribute to the unsung heroes of journalism. |
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But a concerted campaign to brand him a psychopath is, to my mind, not merely gutter journalism but contemptible. |
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You have a responsibility to the community to uphold responsible journalism. |
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Though she barely spoke English, she did have a degree in journalism and a year's experience working at a Kabul news agency. |
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That's the kind of newspeak that presents itself as journalism while detouring around truth. |
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My resolution never to go into television journalism was formed early, when I went out drinking with a local TV newsreader. |
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The only pressure, exerted by me, was to present good journalism supported by valid evidence. |
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First, I hold a three-year diploma in print and broadcast journalism from Conestoga College. |
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I just wanted to say I admire your work you're your professionalism that you bring to broadcast journalism. |
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It's not a prerequisite to have a journalism degree or specialist training for writing features, arts articles or other specialist topics. |
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Its fire, intellectual verve and occasional fanaticism are almost unique in British journalism. |
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Tabloid journalism used to be a guilty vice enjoyed by people waiting in supermarket lines. |
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Here's an author who has intimate, first-hand knowledge of Eastern Europe, TV journalism, and the spiderish, down-and-dirty world of espionage. |
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He had no particular vocational drive but, in his early twenties, someone suggested journalism to him as a career. |
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In journalism, female journalists used to hide their gender by the ploy of using their initials rather than their first names in their bylines. |
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I actually entered journalism myself as a cadet at the age of 17, then I went and got a university degree, then I returned to journalism. |
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In one swift move, he has learned that life is tough at the cutting edge of Scottish journalism and if you can't hack it, put a knot in it. |
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It was an era before distrust, cynicism, agents, and chequebook journalism permanently soured the relationship between footballers and hacks. |
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This seems to be another case of journalism that is intended to obscure the facts rather than shine light on them. |
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He made his living in academia and from occasional exploits into literary journalism. |
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In the past decade, many of my co-workers have left journalism to become mostly corporate public relation officers. |
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This stenographic reliance on official sources is not in keeping with independent journalism. |
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At university, both plunged into a side-life of journalism and nocturnal carousal. |
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Such tactics undermine the print media's history of quality journalism and the notion of the media as the fourth estate of democracy. |
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They're the ones that people in the industry know and recognise as the straight journalism courses. |
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The fact is, pundits are the prima donnas of journalism, and they are paid to be opinionated. |
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I think that, for all of our faults, we do try much harder to put journalism first, then opinionizing second. |
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Journalists alarmed by the directions of both the profession and journalism education said the initiative comes at an opportune time. |
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This is journalism of a high order in which the reporter creates a vista that involves the reader. |
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His second career was in journalism, a field in which he achieved overnight celebrity as a war correspondent. |
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Fellowship is presented to a journalism educator committed to helping prepare minority students for successful careers in journalism. |
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But even the best newspaper operating during what Broder must imagine as the salad days of journalism stumbles. |
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However, journalism did not change overnight and it still indulged in the Soviet practice of wordiness and high-flown rhetoric. |
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So it makes a refreshing change to view a film that chooses to adopt one of the principal laws of journalism by getting its facts right. |
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Indeed, in a critical aside on contemporary journalism, he sees how other editors succumb to temptations of this sort. |
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The case raised new questions about chequebook journalism and the tainting of trials by payments to witnesses. |
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He defends this checkbook journalism by saying that everyone does it, only the others furiously hide their tracks. |
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The NUJ is opposed to chequebook journalism and it is a breach of the NUJ code of conduct. |
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We're in a period when people have lots of suspicion and distrust about journalism. |
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Cast members pose as correspondents as they parody mainstream media's failure to provide robust, independent journalism. |
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At a time when mainstream media is being opened up to the masses, such crackdowns deal a blow to citizen journalism. |
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At that point, seminar leaders can preach the gospel of citizen journalism. |
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Those images and others were broadcast around the globe within a matter of hours, highlighting the value of citizen journalism to the media. |
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In the spirit of citizen journalism, The Chronicle invited Boom to write his own story. |
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Still, many publishers seemingly remain reluctant to take this first step into citizen journalism. |
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A promising component of citizen journalism is in extending what paid journalists will continue to do. |
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But nevertheless, as Nancy has just pointed out, citizen journalism has come of age. |
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I scrap the blog post I was going to write about the future of citizen journalism in 2007 and pour myself a brandy instead. |
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Mutual respect and education will enhance both professional and citizen journalism. |
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Findings also support claims that civic journalism complements traditional journalism. |
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The greatness of Kalki, who passed away 50 years ago, lies in his putting Tamil journalism on a pedestal. |
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This unspeakable piece of codswallop pretty much sums up the worst of New York journalism for me. |
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He was educated at Georgetown University as an English major, and took only one journalism class. |
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What, exactly, does that have to do with journalism, with analyzing information, with educating voters? |
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The recent scandal at the paper has affected all of us in the journalism profession. |
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What journalism needs now, he says, is fewer columnists and more reporters getting out of the office and talking to real people. |
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Henry brings to this position professional experience in both commercial radio and television journalism. |
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For those who thought the era of tough and fearless investigative journalism was over, take heart! |
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I thought that studying communications would lead me to a career in journalism. |
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But we're not fed information, this is not Communist Russia, we have to do independent journalism. |
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He's now a student at a community college in Sacramento, California, where he's studying journalism. |
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Ideas and written pieces can be published online and vetted by readers before going to print, blogging helps the journalism process. |
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They renewed my hope that our profession has not sunk completely into a morass of infotainment journalism that serves to prop up corporate ownership and pop culture. |
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The NUJ wants the council's code of conduct to include greater protection for editors from commercial pressure by newspaper owners and a ban on chequebook journalism. |
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And it makes you wonder if journalism has not been so debased that foreign policy has become impossible. |
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The hacktivist group Anonymous wants to enter the world of journalism, in Anonymous fashion, of course. |
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Freshly enrolled in Ballyfermot senior college in Dublin, the former waiter knew he was right to have chucked in his old job and turned his hand to journalism. |
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In his books, journalism and pamphlets he likes to present himself as a serious counterweight to what he sees as the woolliness and scaremongering of environmentalists. |
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And will our newsrooms be filled with journalists so afraid of committing an ethical miscue that they fail to engage in aggressive and ethical journalism? |
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Then there is the stuff of workaday journalism, rather like an ordinary meal one has to plough through, a chore worthwhile only for whatever nutritional value there may be. |
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Hollywood suffers, as does parliamentary journalism, from a belief that people are far more interested in the inner workings and machinations of the business than they are. |
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I remember local TV covering fires, riots, quakes, floods, shoot-outs, and other plane crashes, and I won't say they were always models of restrained journalism. |
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My full-time career on the Bolton Evening News ended at the week-end when I retired after nearly 39 years of honest toil at the coalface of provincial journalism. |
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Mitchell Stephens, a New York University journalism professor and author of A History of News, differed slightly. |
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Once said to have been rewriting the rules of journalism, Assange has become an outlaw librarian. |
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I'll be getting my journalism certificate at the end of the year. |
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As is often the case in journalism, if you disaffect both parties you know you are doing something right. |
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The Ralph Retort, a paragon of ethical journalism websites, decided to make crowdsourcing stuff to discredit me into a project. |
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Twenty-one years ago White catered events to make extra money during school breaks from the University of Colorado, where she majored in journalism. |
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This kind of usage, common in journalism, is perfectly acceptable, despite the fact that inter-sentential cataphora is often ignored by grammarians. |
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As you will sure agree, what follows is some of the most illuminating journalism since those two hacks at the Washington Post brought Watergate down on Nixon. |
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Like yellow journalism, it is yellow politics and I am against it. |
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How can one even begin to respond to such yellow journalism? |
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The newspapers, in full swing of yellow journalism, want to see violence in the yards between the scabs and the striking workers, but there is no violence. |
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William Randolph Hearst, the father of yellow journalism, sent New York Journal artist Frederick Remington to report on the tenor of Havana and the surrounding countryside. |
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You know, mistakes happen in journalism, as they happen in the military. |
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All four had the inchoate desire to work in journalism when they applied to graduate school but felt clueless about how to get a serious job in journalism. |
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I don't see moderating a debate as a journalism function in a pure way. |
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In moving towards biography you must have felt that journalism was insufficiently rewarded to provide a living and also that its bittiness was in itself too limiting? |
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Otherwise, it will turn out to be another form of yellow journalism. |
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It is a truism to say that humanity is gone out of journalism. |
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Leave it to an Aussie to give American journalism a swift kick in its down under. |
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From the drought in California to the women of ENIAC, The Daily Beast picks the best journalism from around the web this week. |
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This is in stark contrast to Abbott who in a relatively short life has been through university in Australia and overseas, the seminary, business, journalism and politics. |
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In these terms, journalism is even compared to the scientific method, intimately connected with accumulation of facts and analysis, and reportage of evidence. |
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The reason that serious entertainment journalism only tends to exist in major outlets is that only major outlets can scare the system out of reprisals for their honesty. |
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For proof good long-form journalism should never die, read Dan Barry's five part series on Elyria, Ohio. |
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One possible reaction is to emit a deep and weary sigh at the notion that journalism has come to this. |
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When I imagined my journalism career, I never pictured myself standing shirtless in a unisex bathroom in the White House. |
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But online publications had no resources to pay for investigative journalism and reportage. |
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More and more cricket players are turning to commentary and journalism. |
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This is not good journalism, good civics or a good use of time. |
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Why do his employers at the press tolerate such lazy journalism, such padding of what is supposed to be a serious contribution to national debate, in a quality newspaper? |
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It's not that the journalism profession has seen an upswell in employment. |
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This story was produced in partnership with storyboard, Tumblr's home for original journalism. |
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In pursuit of a dream of becoming a foreign correspondent, she moved to London to study journalism. |
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Although she is now an American citizen, Coles has retained an English sense of journalism. |
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She holds an m.s. in journalism from Columbia University and a B.A. from Cornell University. |
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Zimmermann even invented a new name for the genre, which he called a lingual, a piece that blends elements of the cantata, oratorio, radio play, journalism, and feature film. |
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The history of journalism is filled with hoaxes, sensationalism, and widespread misconceptions. |
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However a debate has simmered for years as to whether journalism has improved with the welter of academic courses which produce hundreds of graduates each year. |
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He said that I was being watched and my impartial journalism was appreciated. |
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I found it rather crude mud-slinging instead of responsible journalism. |
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Too much paltering in journalism is fatal to a writer's development. |
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John, who is just shy of 80, belongs to the old guard of journalism. |
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But ABC is charting new territory with its GQ brigade, the first ripply abbed, all-male journalism revue. |
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Here the photojournalists themselves have come to share some of the artists' suspicions of visual journalism, without yet being able to offer an alternative. |
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If the media owners have skated by for years based on their oligopolistic control of the distribution function, then so have the practitioners of journalism. |
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I have now worked in journalism for almost ten years, longer than I've done anything else. |
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The dominant idea was to break away from the ponderous stiffness of the older journalism, to brighten the paper by a more lively presentation of the news. |
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And other masters of literary journalism say they recognize the single-minded pursuit of truth at its core. |
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Earlier this week we told you that the museum in Washington included Rick Sanchez in a permanent exhibit for his pioneering use of social media in journalism. |
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I have raised three factors commercialism, technology and the invasive culture of public relations that are placing pressures on journalism in different ways. |
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Get local businesses to contribute prizes for the best citizen journalism. |
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Last year Georgina also won a fellowship to Columbia School of Journalism and New York University, representing Irish ethnic journalism in New York. |
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She was so great and it made everything click for me, because I was also interested in journalism. |
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As you said, let's not idealize the history of American journalism, but there was a time, as some listeners pointed out, when news wasn't infotainment. |
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She has also published in journalism magazines and academic journals. |
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It wasn't only the scandalmongers of tabloid journalism who were outraged. |
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William Randolph Hearst was, as the author of this magisterial study rightly says, a major force in American politics and journalism for half a century. |
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She will lead a study group for students on current journalism issues. |
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It's been a terrible, horrible, no-good, very bad year for journalism. |
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The reports were thoroughgoing and, as pieces of journalism, blameless. |
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It is clear that the development of online journalism has created a demand for newsworkers who have new skills, particularly in HTML and digital image processing. |
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I think broadcast journalism by and large does not do a very good job. |
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He teaches media studies and journalism at Pennsylvania State University. |
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My earliest memories in journalism are of editors and subs drumming into the cadets the need to never assume your readers knew what you were talking about. |
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He may find this hard work after having been out of practice for so long, but I suggest it will be good for him, and certainly for Australian journalism. |
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He is a garrulous cockney from the old school of tabloid journalism. |
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After two novels, Adler went back to journalism, to reporting on the moment. |
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All of us who cover conflict on a regular basis got into this kind of journalism because we wanted to be immersed up to the eyeballs in our stories. |
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Sara Sonnack, a stony Brook journalism major who will be a senior next year, says she hopes she can make the trip. |
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You have certainly suffered from some pretty beastly journalism at times. |
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The lobbyist-journalist-politician scandal has dynamited the Potemkin village that is Indian journalism. |
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Unlike traditional journalism, it has a collegial give and take. |
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Those who live by junk journalism, the moralist in me proclaims, shall die by junk journalism. |
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The readers who were huffing and puffing in Downer's defence, or accusing you of gutter journalism, most likely have their snouts in various troughs themselves. |
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But, at first, Ariane trained for a different career, graduating from Columbia with a journalism degree. |
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In the interest of balanced journalism, I move up one car to experience a fresh landscape. |
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What marks it out from all other broadcasting organisations is that people trust implicitly that its journalism is impartial, authoritative and true. |
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As drama it was accepted that tabloid journalism and high principle were not natural bedfellows. |
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