American Journalism In Peril Summary

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“The News about the News: American Journalism in Peril” by Leonard Downie Jr. and Robert G. Kaiser is the forefather to Kovack’s “The Elements of Journalism.” More than 10 years before Kovach penned his expectations for journalists and the public, Downie and Kaiser, veteran journalists at the Washington Post, touch on each of Kovach’s key tenants of journalism, as evidenced by their three main goals: “to explain why good journalism is so important, to increase the knowledge of consumers of news about how the news business works and to encourage public support for the best journalism” (p. 12). Their discussions of infotainment, accountability journalism, transparency, objectivity, changing business models, news values and “genuine interactivity” with readers via the Internet, make the similarities clear. Many sentences from “The News about the News” could be from either book. For example, “When profits, and thus ratings, matter most, the temptation to woo bigger audiences with crime, violence, disasters and celebrities is overwhelming,” and “Of the many unknowable facts about the future, perhaps one is most critical: what consumers will want and expect from the Internet five, ten or twenty years from now,” which both touch on major themes in the two pieces (pgs. 177, 216). …show more content…

Downie and Kaiser focus much more on television news than expected, especially considering they are veteran journalists at one the most reputable newspapers in the country. Their disdain for TV news is abundantly clear, forming another key theme in their book. Quotes like “Newspapers still do most of the original reporting,” “Local television does little original reporting of significant community issues,” and “Of course he gave just the headline for most of [the major news stories], a reminder of how sketchy television news is” stand as just a few examples of their clear disdain (pgs. 64, 167,

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