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Harrison, S. L. – 1992
A return to excellence and ethics can end the bashing of the press and earn it respect. H. L. Mencken was an outstanding press-basher. One problem he identified is that journalists see themselves as professionals, when they are no more than "hired hands" unable to control admission to the craft. A solution Mencken offered was to improve…
Descriptors: Ethics, Journalism, Journalism Education, Mass Media Role
McLoughlin, James A.; Trammell, Nancy – Pointer, 1979
The article explores the press and media image of exceptional people. (PHR)
Descriptors: Handicapped Children, News Media, Opinions, Press Opinion
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Hughes, John D. – Contemporary Education, 1982
An essay on the responsibilities of news media discusses the priorities of network news coverage, distorted editing, and the need for consumer awareness and concern about mass media inadequacies. (FG)
Descriptors: Editing, Information Needs, Journalism, Mass Media
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Lounsbury, John H. – High School Journal, 1978
The author applauds the CBS special "Is Anyone Out There Learning?" as a tempered, comprehensive, and serious attempt to throw light on the American educational malaise. All articles in this journal issue comment on this CBS television program, aired in August, 1978. (SJL)
Descriptors: Documentaries, Educational Needs, Educational Problems, Elementary Secondary Education
Breen, Myles P. – 1979
The United States is a major exporter but a minor importer of films and television programs; this situation has been described as a one-way flow of information from the United States to other nations. Although the official United States position is one of dedication to the two-way flow of communication, the "majority" view is that the…
Descriptors: Communication (Thought Transfer), Foreign Countries, Information Dissemination, Information Sources
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Metcalf, Lawrence E. – High School Journal, 1978
This critique of the television special "Is Anyone Out There Learning?" emphasizes three points: (1) CBS presented its own biases disguised as research; (2) television cannot teach literacy; and (3) CBS made education the scapegoat for our social crisis. All articles in this journal issue concern this television program. (SJL)
Descriptors: Bias, Documentaries, Educational Problems, Elementary Secondary Education
Berland, Theodore – 1987
The advent of electronic mass communications in the 1920s forever altered the rhetoric, the audience, and the echoes or responses of the State of the Union Address. Presidents thereafter would use the occasion to speak primarily to the public and secondarily to the Congress. The echoes of the speech that reverberate within the Congress, among the…
Descriptors: Audiences, Mass Media Effects, Persuasive Discourse, Popular Culture
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Paletz, David L.; Guthrie, K. Kendall – Journal of Communication, 1987
Explains how differential coverage of politics, policy, and personality regarding the same two events in three different media--a local newspaper, an elite newspaper, and television network news--reveals three different portraits of presidential concerns and actions. (MM)
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Journalism, Media Research, News Media
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Hahn, Dan F. – Communication Quarterly, 1987
Notes that relationships between the media and the presidency have been written about extensively, yet some conclusions have been misapplied and overvalued, while other potential conclusions have been overlooked or denied. Presents 10 propositions providing corrective hypotheses and new focus for presidential communication researchers. (SKC)
Descriptors: Communication Problems, Communication Research, Media Research, News Media