Journalism
in sentence
348 examples of Journalism in a sentence
They did not innovate by, for example, following the lead of BuzzFeed, a once-notorious “clickbait” factory that soon expanded into serious reportage and long-form
journalism.
When it came to the chores of professional
journalism
– fact-checking, providing historical background, and offering impartial analysis – television news channels failed to fulfill their election-year responsibilities.
The impact of this restructuring on
journalism
and its role in the political process should not be underestimated.
News consumers are twice as likely to express the most trust in local broadcast and cable news compared to social media, attesting to voters’ reliance on television
journalism
to inform their thinking.
The accumulation of local broadcasters by a handful of media corporations has left its mark on
journalism
across the country.
It is a phenomenon that has been revolutionizing
journalism
and entertainment; and, by helping to overcome coordination challenges, it has also had political consequences in a growing number of countries – all of which means an ever-evolving set of opportunities and risks.
After all, few people go into
journalism
to deliberately mislead the public.
If we demand better economic and political
journalism
the way we demand excellent coverage of the World Cup, we’ll get it.
Journalism
has played a larger role as well.
Back then, irrational news decisions, sycophancy, and propaganda were passed off as
journalism.
There has been a lot of finger pointing, with commentators blaming issues like gerrymandering, rising economic inequality, the campaign finance system, and unbalanced
journalism.
Financial
journalism
was soothing.
Investigative
journalism
is branded unpatriotic, and reporters who challenge official policies, as Sheremet did every day, are threatened, harassed, or placed under surveillance.
Indeed, while Sheremet had many friends, who adored his charismatic personality, wit, and contagious optimism, he also had his share of enemies, who detested his uncompromising
journalism.
In
journalism
if you miss a deadline, your article will not be published.
Will today’s constrictions on
journalism
in the UK be similarly transient?
The same system (recently put in place in Australia as well) has often been used by less democratically inclined governments to suppress independent, vigorous journalism; in Ecuador, for example, newspapers are regularly fined large sums for criticizing the government.
In a recent survey by the IWMF and TrollBusters, one-third of respondents said that they had considered abandoning journalism; those at earlier stages in their careers were twice as likely to say that they were considering work in other fields because of the threats and attacks they received, in person or online.
also repeatedly asked for assurances – at least five times – that the NDAA would not sweep up people like the plaintiffs: journalists engaged in
journalism
and citizens engaged in peaceful protest.
Exxon and others sponsored misleading
journalism
and groups that masqueraded as “think tanks.”
But investigative
journalism
becomes discredited when it is suborned to “expose” the private lives of the famous when no issue of public interest is involved.
The role of the Fourth Estate was particularly important during the administration of President George W Bush.Revelations of torture, extraordinary rendition, and warrantless electronic surveillance all depended on investigative
journalism
of a kind that is now threatened by budget cuts and the media’s relentless focus on whatever is current – often at the expense of what is genuinely newsworthy.
But, whereas true investigative
journalism
depends on quality, WikiLeaks distinguishes itself by quantity.
When “access journalism” leads senior editorial decision-makers to identify with political elites, explaining the government’s thinking to the public becomes their primary purpose.
In these dying days of serious newspaper journalism, slick television shows, packaged by highly-paid anchormen – who never utter an original thought themselves, and would never expect a politician to do so – are the only venues where professional politicians feel secure enough to “face” the public.
According to a 2014 report on the future of digital journalism, which I co-edited for the Open Society Foundations, governments used financial pressure to manipulate news organizations in more than half of the markets we examined.
More broadly, by favoring docile journalism, or by cutting subsidies to critical media voices, governments are distorting media markets to their advantage.
In Hungary, too, independent
journalism
is struggling to keep pace with state-funded behemoths.
If even a fraction of the budgetary windfall received by state media was redirected to independent news organizations,
journalism
would thrive and the public would be better informed.
Rivero made his decision to go beyond the revolution's definition of
journalism
in 1989, when he broke from the writer's union and joined with nearly a dozen other intellectuals to sign an open letter raising the issue of political prisoners.
Back
Related words
Media
Investigative
People
Their
Public
Which
About
Should
Political
Journalists
Other
Independent
There
Citizen
Think
Could
Would
Serious
Example
Where