Journalistic Essay

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    duty, anything that is said to them may be reported. No matter how affable the journalists, it is important that you are not negligent and to be apprehensive of this fact. Reporters are not salaried to ask cordial questions, they are paid for journalistic objectivity. With that, journalists tend to be skeptical of all information they attain from public relations professionals. Nonetheless, as a spokesperson, you represent the administration of the of our organization, and will be quoted by name

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    “just say no” campaign. Bush appointed William Bennet, Reagan’s secretary of education, to be the “drug czar” and fight the drug people. The Culture of Sleaze was when journalism exposed sleaziness among many religious right wing personalities. Journalistic exposure of sleaze in American life brought shows like 60 minutes and Nightline high ratings. People began to feel that Reagan had paid too little attention to the sleaziness of his subordinates. More than 100 members of Reagan’s administration

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    London? Stephen Crane was recognized by modern experts that he was the most inventive novelist of his generation. Jack London became famous worldwide by the age of 30 years old for his books Call of the Wild (1903), The Sea Wolf (1904) and other journalistic accomplishments. Both of these novelists have accomplished so many things throughout their lives. My goal in this paper is to provide some information about their lives and hopefully interest you to read some of their books. Stephen Crane was

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    By the late 1800s, sexual expression and experimentation in literature was fully underway. During that period, several women became professional writers and achieved commercial success, for example Sarah Grand’s The Heavenly Twins and the works of authors such as Oliver Schreiner, Meredith Moore or Emma Frances Brooke, all of whom created heroines who rejected aspects of the traditional feminine role. Novelists both male and female were broadening the range of fiction to include a woman’s point of

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    • Introduction: Women have historically been made to feel “invisible” in the underrepresentation of female sporting events in a primarily patriarchal sports media coverage. This paper will analyze the historical discrimination against women’s sports in the patriarchal mass media, but it will also define the solution of gender and sex tolerance of women through the inclusion of women in mass media reporting, anchoring, and journalism in sports broadcasting. • Sex and gender Relations: Patriarchal

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    It's What I Do Analysis

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    Journalism and Politics are influential for people to be informed about and what is going on within the United States or internationally. Journalism is a great significant impact to politics, with the all the information from the Presidential Debate or what is going on with the war in Iraq. The audience can also visually see what they are being informed by the photojournalist who are taking photos to tell a story. In the novel, “It’s What I Do”, by Lynsey Addario talks about her personal experience

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    Deaths are prominent news among the general public, especially ones concerning sports. Boxer Benny Paret was killed due to a match, causing him to fall into a coma and never awaken. When the event occurred in 1962, many opinions were shared, including the ones expressed in the essays of Norman Mailer and Norman Cousins. Although they cover the same event of Benny Paret’s death, they do so in completely different ways. Mailer uses language to create a very poetic tone, illustrating the event with

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    The subsequent analyses of this case study can be categorised as such: the use of the Espionage Act in the case of Chelsea Manning, and the use of Wikileaks and how that impacts the development in the means of releasing information. This case study is significant in the assessment of both the Espionage Act and the evolution of whistle blowers. This section will support this in consideration of the argument of this dissertation which is that with the evolution of what is understood to be a political

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    Daily Show Satire

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    this form of media. Although these types of shows seem to cover a lesser span of stories than traditional media, they are not bound to the same standards and restrictions (Zinser 373). The Daily Show is "unburdened by objectivity," creating more journalistic freedom while allowing for more edgy observations to be made in the name of news and comedy (Zinser 371). These same freedoms are portrayed in a somewhat parallel article written by Antonia peacocke. Peacocke bases her article around the show Family

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    The 9/11 terrorist attacks irrevocably and dramatically transformed the landscape of national security and risk, marking the beginning of the nebulous and never-ending War on Terror. Western governments frequently cite terrorism to rationalize legislation that restricts the privacy and democratic freedoms of its citizenry as anti-terror, increasing unaccountable government power. This rhetoric includes that governments must eliminate all risk of terror, it being such an existential threat that we

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