Topic: Tom Rosenstiel
The TV station business is becoming tougher by the day, but here's something that could make things painful: The broadcasters' biggest cash cow...
IN 2006, the investigative journalist Seymour Hersh was informed that the CIA was torturing suspected terrorists with fire ants. As veteran newspapermen Bill Kovach and Tom Rosenstiel observe in Blur, journalistic integrity doesn't get better than that, yet in the sensationalist ...
<div id="subtitle">While pessimistic about industry, news executives don't want to turn to government for bailout</div><div><p>Although news executives know their industry is in trouble, most are unwilling to turn to the government or interest groups for ...
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Corporation for Public Broadcasting launched a $10.5 million project on Thursday to increase regional reporting, filling a growing gap due to cutbacks in the news industry where profits have tumbled.The nonprofit corporation created by Congress ...
Online news consumers have favorites, but little loyalty, and don't want to pay Getting people to pay for news online at this point would be ""If we move to some pay system, that shift is going to have to surmount significant ...
Study concludes newspapers remain the main source of original reporting despite financial woesMost local news still flows from newspapers even as an Internet-driven upheaval diminishes the depth of their coverage, according to a study to be released Monday.The findings are based ...
A decade ago, Bill Kovach and Tom Rosenstiel, two grandees of American journalism, warned of a crisis: Much like a beleaguered Scotty on a hurtling Starship Enterprise, Kovach and Rosenstiel warned that democracy "cannot take it. There is a deer in headlights ...
Tom Rosenstiel, an author and journalist, has worked as a media critic for the Los Angeles Times and MSNBC's The News With Brian Williams. There's a growing perception that opinion news outlets like Fox and MSNBC drive the news agenda ...
A decade ago, Bill Kovach and Tom Rosenstiel, two grandees of American journalism, warned of a crisis: Much like a beleaguered Scotty on a hurtling Starship Enterprise, Kovach and Rosenstiel warned that democracy "cannot take it. There is a deer in headlights ...
Journalism faces tough time, but report suggests all is not lostThe state of journalism is bleak, but an annual study of the industry suggests all hope should not be lost.While the business model of many news organizations appears to be fracturing ...