Academic literature on the topic 'News-Tribune'

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Journal articles on the topic "News-Tribune"

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Haryanto, Dedi, and Ria Rusmayanti. "Analisis Pengaruh Faktor Eksternal Dan Internal Pelanggan Dalam Pengambilan Keputusan Pembelian Surat Kabar Harian Borneo Tribune." JURNAL MANAJEMEN MOTIVASI 9, no. 3 (November 25, 2013): 224. http://dx.doi.org/10.29406/jmm.v9i3.205.

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The purpose of this study was to determine the influence of external factors and internal when making a decision to buy Borneo Tribune Daily newspaper. The author uses descriptive methods f and using 100 respondents were using purposive sampling. External variable is an indicator for culture, sub-culture,social class, reference groups / reference and families. Indicators for the internal variables are motivation, perception, learning, and beliefs and attitudes. While the indicator for the decision variables measured through 5 stages of buying decision process konsume purchase. The analytical tool used is multiple linear regression. The results of the study revealed that the external and internal factors significant and positive influence in the purchase decision Borneo Tribune Daily News of 0.581 and 0.400. Based on this value it can be concluded that external factors have a greater influence than internal factors. simultaneous correlation coefficient indicates a strong relationship category. value of F at 145.661> 3.09 so the value Ftable simultaneously (synchronously) does not have significant influence in the purchase decision Borneo Daily News Tribune was denied. t value> of ttable, so the null hypothesis that external factors and internal states partially customers do not have a significant influence in the purchase decision Borneo Daily News Tribune was denied.Keywords: Faktor internal, faktor eksternal, pengambilan keputusan pembelian, Borneo Tribun.
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Afrasiab. "Representation of Muslims and Islam in US Print Media." Global Mass Communication Review IV, no. I (December 30, 2019): 10–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.31703/gmcr.2019(iv-i).02.

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This study is an attempt to evaluate and check that how Muslims and Islam are represented /portrayed in western media through in the light of the relationship between Culture, belief, language, religion, ways of life and ideology. For finding that, headlines of larger circulated print media of the west the Independent, Chicago Tribune and Chicago Sun-Times, were selected w-e-f January2016 to December 2017 and Muslim and Islam representation was studied. This study explores the image of Muslims and Islam in Chicago Tribune and Chicago Sun times Newspapers selected news headlines during the period 2016 to 2017. And found that the overall coverage regarding Muslims and Islam remain Negative in both newspapers. It is based on hypothesis that “the overall ratios of unfavorable coverage about Muslims and Islam would be greater than favorable coverage in Chicago Tribune and Chicago Sun times” and tested through content analysis and two communication theories and media framing theory is applied. 200news items published regarding Muslims and Islam during proposed period of study in both newspapers in which in Chicago Sun times the result was (31 % coverage remained Positive 61 % remained Negative and 8 % remained Neutral) and in Chicago Tribune Positive (37 % coverage remained Positive 56 % remained Negative and 7 % news items were Neutral).The above mentioned analysis proved that Muslims and Islam are represented negatively and it proved that the western media presents a bad image of Muslims.
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Wan, Anan, Tara Marie Mortensen, Yicheng Zhu, and Jo-Yun Li. "From confrontations to civil liberties: Newspaper photo framing of police brutality and riots in Los Angeles 1992 and Ferguson, Missouri 2014." Newspaper Research Journal 39, no. 3 (September 2018): 270–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0739532918796237.

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This study compares the news media’s visual framing of the Los Angeles Riots of 1992 and the Ferguson, Missouri, riots of 2014. A visual content analysis of 387 news images published in the New York Times, Los Angeles Times, Chicago Tribune and Atlanta Journal-Constitution was conducted. Results show that newspapers’ visual portrayals of civil unrest have shifted focus from the confrontation between protesters and the police to an emphasis on the depiction of morality, human interest and civil emotions.
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Sparviero, Sergio. "Hybrids Before Nonprofits: Key Challenges, Institutional Logics, and Normative Rules of Behavior of News Media Dedicated to Social Welfare." Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly 97, no. 3 (July 29, 2020): 790–810. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1077699020932564.

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This article proposes comparing nonprofit news organizations that prioritize social welfare goals with the hybrid organizational form that mixes the institutional logics of charities and business enterprises: the Social Enterprise. The institutional logic comprises organizing templates, patterns of actions and values. These Social News Enterprises (SNEs) are analyzed as hybrids mixing the institutional logics of commercial, public, and alternative news media. Financed by donations and the revenue from services, SNEs engage in public, investigative, and explanatory journalism. Normative behavioral principles of SNEs are used to compare the impact-based model of ProPublica with the growth-focused model of The Texas Tribune.
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DeWeese, Keith. "Online news and DAM – An interview with Keith DeWeese, Tribune Interactive." Journal of Digital Asset Management 6, no. 2 (April 2010): 109–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/dam.2010.6.

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Zimmerman, Matthew. "Interview With David S. Kraft, Senior Director of News Operations, ESPN Digital Media." International Journal of Sport Communication 3, no. 2 (June 2010): 163–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.1123/ijsc.3.2.163.

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David Kraft has been with ESPN’s online operation since 1996, when it was known as ESPNetSportsZone. That year, Kraft helped design ESPN’s online coverage of the bombing at the Summer Olympics in Atlanta. For 4 years he has headed the news operation at espn.com and since 2009 has also managed the copy desk. Prior to joining ESPN, Kraft spent 6 years as the managing editor of Volleyball magazine, immediately preceded by 3 years as a newspaper reporter at the San Luis Obispo Telegram-Tribune.
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Youm, Kyu Ho. "The “Wire Service” Libel Defense." Journalism Quarterly 70, no. 3 (September 1993): 682–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/107769909307000318.

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Local news media can safely republish defamatory stories furnished by reputable wire services on the basis of the “wire service” libel defense. The powerful, but often neglected, libel defense has been applied to at least twenty reported cases in thirteen jurisdictions. Its success rate has been almost 100 percent. From the First Amendment perspective, the wire service defense, which has its genesis in Layne v. Tribune Co. (1933), adds considerably to free debate as an additional weapon for the press to tackle meritless libel suits.
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Huang, Edgar, Lisa Rademakers, Moshood A. Fayemiwo, and Lillian Dunlap. "Converged Journalism and Quality: A Case Study of The Tampa Tribune News Stories." Convergence: The International Journal of Research into New Media Technologies 10, no. 4 (December 2004): 73–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/135485650401000407.

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Pellechia, Marianne G. "Trends in science coverage: a content analysis of three US newspapers." Public Understanding of Science 6, no. 1 (January 1997): 49–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/0963-6625/6/1/004.

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This paper describes a content analysis of science news reporting in three major daily newspapers, the New York Times, the Chicago Tribune, and the Washington Post, during the last three decades. It was found that although science articles represent only a small percentage of the total number of articles printed, this percentage has steadily increased with each time period. The results also show that, at least in the newspapers analysed, science coverage does not differ substantially in terms of the range of topics covered, as well as information that has been both included and omitted from science news accounts. Although there were some differences between articles appearing in the different time frames, in general science news reporting has not changed significantly in terms of the comprehensiveness of accounts. An especially significant finding is that articles frequently omitted methodological and contextual information, features most often mentioned as critical for a complete journalistic account of science.
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Haider, Syed Imran, and Azhar Waqar. "Projection of CPEC in Print Media of Pakistan from 2014-2019." Global Mass Communication Review IV, no. I (December 30, 2019): 26–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.31703/gmcr.2019(iv-i).03.

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The study aims to examine the narrative of CPEC disseminated by the Pakistani national print English media. For comprehensive understanding, the CPEC was divided into three dimensions, economic, culture and environment. The study follows the secondary data for the analysis of the narrative on the print English media about the CPEC. The English media was specified in a way that all the leading newspapers like Dawn, The Tribune and The News were consulted covering the news and the opinion-based articles. The study finds that the change in the trends about narrative of CPEC seems fluctuating between the favorable and unfavorable for Pakistan. Hence, the changing trends in narrative seem quite clear and visible. The study recommends that government and relevant officials representing CPEC should properly interaction with the media and journalists need to be capacitated in knowledge about the particular aspects of CPEC.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "News-Tribune"

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Tawe, Ngamale Emmanuel. "The making of business news in Africa: a case study of Cameroon Tribune newspaper." Thesis, Rhodes University, 2012. http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1002942.

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Since the emergence of business journalism as a genre within the broad spectrum of news reporting, most of the scholarly works into its development have focused on growth in the western (that is developed) world. This indicates that very limited research has been done in the field of business journalism in the developing economies. Thus there exist gaps in understanding the practice of business journalism in Africa and part of this is rooted in how the practice is defined. This study aims to shed light on the practice of business journalism in this African context. It explores the onset and development of business journalism and its evolution in Africa. The main focus in this case study was to understand the definition of business news in the specific context of the Cameroon Tribune. Individual in-depth interviews were used as the main (primary) data collection method along with observation and cursory reading as complementary (secondary) methods. This study is influenced by the sociology of news production which foregrounds theoretical frames such as news construction and gatekeeping. Findings from this study reveal that business news at the Cameroon Tribune is elitist, essentially defined around personality and, is in the most part, development news. Additional findings indicate that the absence of any editorial guidelines leaves most reporters secondguessing how to please management with socialised values mostly acquired through peer learning. In conclusion, this study advances the necessity for the Africanisation of business news. This would entail reporting financial, economic, consumer, and corporate affairs, from a vocabulary and composition context that unveils much exchange taking place in the lives of many Africans.
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Holm, Daniel. "Changed Memorial, Changed Meanings: The History of Oberlin's Soldiers Monument." Oberlin College Honors Theses / OhioLINK, 2010. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=oberlin1275075317.

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Dotson, Gary. "Watchdogs Still Watching| An Analysis of Investigative Reporting at the Belleville News-Democrat and Sarasota Herald-Tribune." Thesis, Southern Illinois University at Edwardsville, 2014. http://pqdtopen.proquest.com/#viewpdf?dispub=1556753.

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Christensen, Andrea Ludlow. "The Rhetoric of Newspaper Rivalry in the Face of Image Restoration and Transformation." Diss., CLICK HERE for online access, 2005. http://contentdm.lib.byu.edu/ETD/image/etd886.pdf.

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Orand, Amber Werley Darden Bob. "A quantitative analysis of theater criticism in four American newspapers." Waco, Tex. : Baylor University, 2008. http://hdl.handle.net/2104/5169.

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Cox, Holly M. "From Suffragettes to Grandmothers: A Qualitative Textual Analysis of Newspaper Coverage of Five Female Politicians in Utah's Deseret News and Salt Lake Tribune." Diss., CLICK HERE for online access, 2008. http://contentdm.lib.byu.edu/ETD/image/etd2701.pdf.

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Lebourg-Leportier, Léa. "La Tribune et l’Échafaud : morale et politique dans les biographies de criminels en Angleterre et en France, 1620-1830." Thesis, Sorbonne université, 2018. http://www.theses.fr/2018SORUL156.

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Cette étude s’intéresse aux biographies de criminels, l’un des nombreux imprimés sur le crime qui se développent au cours de l’époque moderne en Angleterre et en France. Ces dernières sont travaillées par des tensions morale et politique. Elles revendiquent un dessein didactique tout en exploitant volontiers le sensationnel de leur sujet. De même, la représentation de criminels est équivoque politiquement. Plutôt que de faire des hors-la-loi des repoussoirs et de souligner la manière dont ils sont écrasés par le pouvoir qu’ils ont défié, les textes les glorifient souvent et construisent un panthéon du crime. Cette thèse propose de réévaluer les ambiguïtés idéologiques de ces textes au croisement des discours historique, journalistique et romanesque en prenant en considération certains traits de l’écriture moderne comme l’ambition morale généralisée ou le flottement de la distinction entre fait et fiction. Cette remise en perspective conduit à repenser les potentialités subversives de ces textes qui semblent en fait moins résider dans l’héroïsation des criminels que dans l’articulation entre leur parcours et des questions sociales et politiques spécifiques au temps
This study focuses on criminal biographies, one of the much-printed forms of criminal literature which developed in the early modern England and France. These texts are marked by moral and political ambivalence. Despite their proclaimed prescriptive aims, they make the most of the very sensational topic of crime. Furthermore, the depiction of criminals is politically problematic. Instead of presenting them as bad examples, underlining the way they are defeated by the authority they defy, they are often romanticized and thus a crime pantheon is built. This study seeks to reassess the ideological ambiguities of criminal biographies, at the crossroads of historical, journalistic, and novelistic discourses, taking into account some features of early modern literature, notably the systematic moral purpose and the blurred distinction between fact and fiction. This change of perspective leads us to re-evaluate the biographies’ potential in transgressing. Rather than lying in the romanticization of the outlaws, these seem to lie in the way some texts link the outlaws’ lives with some social and political debates of the time
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Holloway, Joseph Abel. "Nonprofit online journalism and the quest for sustainability." Thesis, 2011. http://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2011-05-3375.

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The author gives an in-depth look into nonprofit journalism, particularly in the form of online media. The report is divided into four sections. The first section provides a general overview of the online nonprofit news landscape and a brief discussion of why news organizations are looking to it as a possible model for sustainable news in the future. The profiles of specific nonprofit online news organizations begin with section two and an examination of ProPublica. Section three looks at the Texas Tribune. Section four looks at the Austin Post.
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Books on the topic "News-Tribune"

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Unger, Rudolph M. The Chicago tribune news staff, 1920s-1960s. [Chicago, Ill.?: s.n.], 1991.

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Singer, Bruce. A century of news: From the archives of the International Herald Tribune. London: Thames and Hudson, 1987.

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DeWitt, Carlyle. The Holbrook fire department 1919-2002: A history from the pages of The Holbrook Tribune-News. [S.l.]: Navajo County Publishers, 2003.

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Jennings, Kenneth M. Labor relations at the New York Daily news: Peripheral bargaining and the 1990 strike. Westport, Conn: Praeger, 1993.

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Li(Zuoan), Yanxi. Golden Oak Communication Tribune and Research. Beaverton,USA: CHINA INTERNATIONAL PRESS, 2019.

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On deadline: Labor relations in newspaper publishing. Bayside, NY: Social Change Press, 1998.

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Company, Tribune, ed. Knight-Ridder/Tribune Business news. Denver, CO: CARL Corp., 1989.

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Tribune, Duluth News. Duluth News Tribune Impression 125 Years. Duluth News Tribune, 1999.

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Chernoff and Ethel And Chernoff Tiersky. International Herald Tribune: In the News: Mastering Reading and Language Skills with the Newspaper. NTC/Contemporary Publishing Company, 1995.

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Stop the press: How the Mormon Church tried to silence the Salt Lake Tribune. Prometheus Books, 2018.

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Book chapters on the topic "News-Tribune"

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Nelson, Jacob L. "Journalism’s Imagined Audiences." In Imagined Audiences, 45–64. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197542590.003.0004.

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This chapter offers an overview of the primary differences in imagined audiences between production-oriented audience engagement news organizations like Hearken and City Bureau and more traditional news organizations like the Chicago Tribune. Because City Bureau and the Tribune both focus on Chicago, each organization’s conceptualization of its specific audience demonstrates how profound differences can unfold even when audiences overlap. Hearken, however, does not publish news. Instead, it provides tools and services to newsrooms to help them improve their relationships with their audiences. Hearken’s imagined news audience is, therefore, a general one. The author concludes that, despite the fact that the journalists diverge dramatically when it comes to news audience composition and expectations, they see eye to eye on one important thing: Their imagined audiences emphasize the audience’s relationship with news above all else.
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Nelson, Jacob L. "Introduction." In Imagined Audiences, 1–10. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197542590.003.0001.

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This chapter introduces the book’s overarching questions: How do journalists conceptualize their audiences? Who gets included in these conceptualizations, and who is left out? Perhaps most important, how aligned are journalism’s “imagined” audiences with the real ones? It also introduces the book’s ethnographic data, collected from three news organizations: the Chicago Tribune, City Bureau, and Hearken. Both the Tribune and City Bureau publish news, while Hearken offers tools and services to newsrooms interested in improving their relationship with their audiences. Each has its own distinct take on what people expect from news, which leads all three to chart remarkably different paths in their shared quest to make high-quality, valuable, and publicly appreciated journalism. Taken together, these data reveal how journalists’ assumptions about their audiences shape their approaches to their audiences.
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Gallon, Kim T. "The Black Press and a Mass Black Readership." In Pleasure in the News, 15–44. University of Illinois Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5622/illinois/9780252043222.003.0002.

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This chapter examines the mass movement of southern African Americans to Northern cities in the first half of the twentieth century and shows how it dramatically altered the Black Press. After 1920, black newspaper editors covered more news that they believed would appeal to working-class African Americans. In charting the development of the early-twentieth-century Black Press, chapter 1 presents a comparative analysis of five different newspapers: The Amsterdam News, The Baltimore Afro-American, The Chicago Defender, The Philadelphia Tribune, and the Pittsburgh Courier. These five newspapers demonstrate how the Black Press fostered and imagined an African American readership’s interest in sexuality through its sensational coverage of the variegations of black life throughout the 1920s and 1930s.
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Nelson, Jacob L. "The Promise of Audience Engagement." In Imagined Audiences, 27–44. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197542590.003.0003.

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Though there is widespread agreement surrounding the problems journalism faces, there also is a growing rift among journalism professionals and researchers about how best to solve them. A growing number of journalism stakeholders argue that the news should focus more on “audience engagement,” a loosely defined term that generally involves journalists’ incorporating more audience input in news production to more accurately reflect their lived experiences. Those at City Bureau and Hearken believe this more collaborative form of news production will increase the audience’s trust in news as well as the amount of value they derive from it. Others, including many at the Chicago Tribune, disagree. In addition to offering a comprehensive definition of audience engagement, this chapter also traces the disagreement surrounding it to enduring differences in how journalists perceive the public.
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Casey, Steven. "Censorship at Sea." In The War Beat, Pacific, 45–66. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190053635.003.0004.

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In the first months of 1942, the navy exerted tight control over its war correspondents. While allowing them access to ships, it placed so many restrictions on what they could write about that a group of them, led by Robert Casey of the Chicago Daily News, began to complain vociferously. Stanley Johnston of the Chicago Tribune ultimately became the biggest troublemaker. After escaping from the USS Lexington before it sank during the Battle of the Coral Sea, Johnston used the slow journey home not only to write about this experience but also to learn that the navy had received advanced knowledge of the Japanese attack on Midway. His stories on both battles created a major sensation. With the navy convinced that the Tribune had divulged its secret codebreaking operation, the Roosevelt administration even made a failed bid to prosecute it under the Espionage Act.
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Nelson, Jacob L. "First Imagined, Then Pursued." In Imagined Audiences, 85–104. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197542590.003.0006.

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This chapter draws on Hearken’s efforts to challenge journalism’s audience perceptions—as well as the audience pursuits unfolding within City Bureau and the Chicago Tribune—to explore the connection between the way journalists imagine their audiences and the steps they take to reach them. This chapter also explores another dispute unfolding throughout the news industry: the lens through which journalists conceptualize their own expertise. Traditional journalists tend to take for granted the assumption that their professional training and skills make them significantly better equipped to report the news than the people they hope to reach. This is different from those advocating for more audience engagement, who see their audiences as being more valuable as news collaborators than they are typically given credit for and also view journalists themselves as being in need of exactly this sort of collaboration.
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Diaz-Andrade, Antonio. "Journalism Online in Peru." In Encyclopedia of Information Science and Technology, First Edition, 1742–46. IGI Global, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-59140-553-5.ch306.

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Online journalism dates back to the end of the 1970s, when Knight-Ridder launched an initiative to develop a videotext service in the United States, which it later dropped, in 1986, after realizing enormous losses. In 1988, Knight-Ridder bought Dialog Information Services, Inc.; only a year later, the first signs of success appeared. By the end of the 1980s, Gannet launched a daily news piece in text format. In 1992, The Chicago Tribune became the world’s first daily to launch an electronic version of its newspaper. In 1993, Knight-Ridder started publishing what would eventually become one of the paradigms of electronic journalism, the San Jose Mercury Center. By 1994, the major newspapers in the United States offered readers an online version (Díaz & Meso, 1998). Now, Internet users can read newspapers, listen to the radio, and watch TV from anywhere, anytime (McClung, 2001).
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Essoh, Grace Eugenie Ndobo. "Beautifying Controversial African Politicians Through Metaphors." In Advances in Media, Entertainment, and the Arts, 253–72. IGI Global, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-5225-9821-3.ch011.

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This chapter critically analyses the use of conceptual metaphors in selected Cameroonian newspapers articles aimed at beautifying or criticizing President Paul Biya and his aides. The selected articles covered a 2018 US-Cameroon diplomatic crisis triggered by US Ambassador's advice to Biya to relinquish power. In the light of a textual analysis of the corpus, the chapter argues that journalists and citizen journalists whose articles were considered for this study portrayed Biya and his close aides along a variety of metaphors. Positivity or negativity in the metaphors used in the media text generally depended on their authors' tones and editorial policies. The pro-government and neutral media voices (notably Cameroon Tribune and Mutations) mostly used metaphors such as nation building (representing Biya as an accomplished nation builder) and scaling (by which Biya and his aides were judged or rated high above standards). Meanwhile, anti-government media outlets (such as Cameroon Concords, Cameroon Post, Le Messager and Bareta News) used such metaphors as bestiality, scatology/garbage, theatre, oppression, transgression, and sickness/handicap among others, to criticize Biya's rule.
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Hamilton, Michael William. "Reader Responses to the Yearning for Zion Ranch Raid and Its Aftermath on the Websites of the Salt Lake Tribune and the Deseret News." In Saints Under Siege, 107–23. NYU Press, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.18574/nyu/9780814795286.003.0005.

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Keats, Jonathon. "Bacn." In Virtual Words. Oxford University Press, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780195398540.003.0016.

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Seldom has the arc of a neologism been so visible. On the afternoon of August 18, 2007, standing at the PodCamp Pittsburgh registration desk, Tommy Vallier, Andy Quale, Ann Turiano, Jesse Hambley, and Val and Jason Head—all participants in the city’s annual social media conference—were having a conversation about Canadian bacon. Vallier informed the group that peameal bacon was an alternate name for the breakfast meat, leading others to comment that peameal sounded like email. This coincidence in turn reminded them of a prior discussion about all the automatic email notifications they received daily, from Google news alerts to Facebook updates, which were becoming almost as distracting as spam. They decided it was a problem, and their banter about peameal and pork suggested a name. Since the notifications were a cut above spam—after all, these updates had been requested—they dubbed this “middle class” of email bacn. The following day the six PodCampers held a spontaneous group session with several dozen of their fellow social media mavens, who were swiftly won over by the jokey name and ironic spelling (a play on sites such as Flickr and Socializr then popular). The web address bacn2.com was acquired—bacn.com was already taken by a bacon distributor and bacn.org belonged to the Bay Area Consciousness Network—and a droll public service announcement explaining the time-wasting dangers of bacn was promptly posted on YouTube. What happened next was best explained by PodCamp’s cofounder Chris Brogan to the Chicago Tribune five days later. “The PodCamp event was about creating personal media,” he said, “so 200-something reporters, so to speak, launched that story as soon as they heard it.” The term was written up on hundreds of personal blogs, bringing it into Technorati’s top fifteen search terms and leading Erik Schark to muse on BoingBoing that the spread of bacn showed “the ridiculous power of the internet.” Schark also listed the mainstream media that had covered it, including CNET, Wired , and the Washington Post, where Rob Pegoraro complained about the name: “Bacon is good,” he opined.
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Reports on the topic "News-Tribune"

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Hendricks, Kasey. Data for Alabama Taxation and Changing Discourse from Reconstruction to Redemption. University of Tennessee, Knoxville Libraries, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.7290/wdyvftwo4u.

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At their most basic level taxes carry, in the words of Schumpeter ([1918] 1991), “the thunder of history” (p. 101). They say something about the ever-changing structures of social, economic, and political life. Taxes offer a blueprint, in both symbolic and concrete terms, for uncovering the most fundamental arrangements in society – stratification included. The historical retellings captured within these data highlight the politics of taxation in Alabama from 1856 to 1901, including conflicts over whom money is expended upon as well as struggles over who carries their fair share of the tax burden. The selected timeline overlaps with the formation of five of six constitutions adopted in the State of Alabama, including 1861, 1865, 1868, 1875, and 1901. Having these years as the focal point makes for an especially meaningful case study, given how much these constitutional formations made the state a site for much political debate. These data contain 5,121 pages of periodicals from newspapers throughout the state, including: Alabama Sentinel, Alabama State Intelligencer, Alabama State Journal, Athens Herald, Daily Alabama Journal, Daily Confederation, Elyton Herald, Mobile Daily Tribune, Mobile Tribune, Mobile Weekly Tribune, Morning Herald, Nationalist, New Era, Observer, Tuscaloosa Observer, Tuskegee News, Universalist Herald, and Wilcox News and Pacificator. The contemporary relevance of these historical debates manifests in Alabama’s current constitution which was adopted in 1901. This constitution departs from well-established conventions of treating the document as a legal framework that specifies a general role of governance but is firm enough to protect the civil rights and liberties of the population. Instead, it stands more as a legislative document, or procedural straightjacket, that preempts through statutory material what regulatory action is possible by the state. These barriers included a refusal to establish a state board of education and enact a tax structure for local education in addition to debt and tax limitations that constrained government capacity more broadly. Prohibitive features like these are among the reasons that, by 2020, the 1901 Constitution has been amended nearly 1,000 times since its adoption. However, similar procedural barriers have been duplicated across the U.S. since (e.g., California’s Proposition 13 of 1978). Reference: Schumpeter, Joseph. [1918] 1991. “The Crisis of the Tax State.” Pp. 99-140 in The Economics and Sociology of Capitalism, edited by Richard Swedberg. Princeton University Press.
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