Journalists Essays

  • The Career of Journalist

    914 Words  | 2 Pages

    To become a journalist one must be ready for late nights, irregular hours, and heartbreak. Being a journalist isn’t easy. So much can happen in a few seconds, and it’s almost like watching a soap opera. Many people think that being a journalist involves writing a small story and interviewing one or two people, but that’s not the case. Journalists have staggering deadlines to meet and at any time could be thrown into the most dangerous situations. It sounds like a hectic lifestyle, but the fact that

  • The Journalist And The Murderer: Summary

    837 Words  | 2 Pages

    Since the beginning of journalism there has been a controversial debate over ethics and the extent to which a journalist may go to obtain a story. According to W.E.B. Dubois, integrity, honesty, decency, and courage are four primary ethical principles every person should follow. Author Janet Malcolm dives deep into the ethics of journalism in her groundbreaking publication The Journalist and the Murderer. Malcolm analyzes the ethics of best-selling author Joe McGinniss during his time developing

  • Female Journalists and Sexual Harassment

    1054 Words  | 3 Pages

    Female Journalists and Sexual Harassment Twenty-first century America faces many problems, and sexual harassment has clearly become a pervasive one. Sexual harassment is about a lack of respect that makes an individual feel violated, whether it is about their gender or the inappropriate manner in which they may be treated. Specifically, the workplace has become a very common place for sexual harassment to take place, and while inhibiting the work quality of employees; it is degrading to any victim

  • Should Journalists Have Sky-Rocketed?

    942 Words  | 2 Pages

    lie for commission. For journalists to be ranked just above lawyers and below car salesmen, it must be because citizens believe journalists lie and are unethical. Fiona Conway said in class, “as journalists you sacrifice your right to your opinions.” Yet, in this day and age social media has become huge for public opinion, including journalists’. There is a huge difference between a journalist expressing their opinion and an everyday citizen. The difference is that journalists are supposed to be unbiased

  • The Journalist And The Murderer, By Joe Mcginniss

    1677 Words  | 4 Pages

    All journalists have to be subjective, but what discerns a good journalist from a bad journalist is whether the subjectivity is based off of truthful facts. This is best seen in Janet Malcolm’s essay “The Journalist and the Murderer”, where Joe McGinniss acts in an fallacious manner by writing his subject without any regard to the subject’s desires. He disregards truth by manipulating facts to benefit his personal image of his subject. The nature of his story also allows McGinniss to disregard objectivity

  • A Career As A Well-Known White House Journalist

    548 Words  | 2 Pages

    Well-known White House journalist, Helen Thomas once said, “We don't go into journalism to be popular. It is our job to seek the truth and put constant pressure on our leaders until we get answers.” As an aspiring photographer and journalist with a great deal of questions to ask society, and its leaders, this statement couldn’t be more true to me. My life and career goal is to not only become an accomplished journalist, but to redefine the current complex of news and mass-media. Writing and photographing

  • Journalists Should Investigate Castro's Prisons Instead of Gitmo

    1045 Words  | 3 Pages

    Journalists Should Investigate Castro's Prisons Instead of Gitmo The recent hysterics in the press over the treatment of al Qaeda prisoners give the impression that Cuba is some idyllic bastion of human rights save for that American eyesore Guantanamo Bay. The overzealous reporters en route to the communist isle are hell-bent on discovering some form of torture or mistreatment of the prisoners. Upon discovering that the envisioned inhumanity of "Gitmo" in reality is nothing more than conditions

  • Analysis of Janet Malcom´s The Journalist and the Murderer

    802 Words  | 2 Pages

    Self-motivation and determination are two of the main ideals of being journalist. If a journalist does not have the desire to find and report a story, he has no career. A journalist depends on finding the facts, getting to the bottom of the story and reporting to the public, whether it’s positive or negative. Janet Malcom states in the book The Journalist and the Murderer, “Every journalist who is not too stupid or too full of himself to notice what is going on knows that what he does is morally

  • Source Disclosure and Journalist's Ethics

    1075 Words  | 3 Pages

    Reporter’s Privilege Journalism has grown and developed over the years along with journalistic ethics. Journalists have a code of ethics or a moral compass. Every story that a reporter produces has either a named or unnamed source. Several states have protective laws designed for reporters who have stories with anonymous sources, but Mississippi is one of the only states in America that does not have a shield law in place. Mississippi should enact a shield law giving reporters the privilege not

  • Journalism Of Attachment Essay

    1077 Words  | 3 Pages

    In this era of globalization, news reporting is no longer just a means of communications, but it has also developed into a tool for change. Prominent journalists like Julian Assange, Nick Davies, Sir Charles Wheeler and many more has changed the landscape and outcomes of information, war and news reporting itself. But Martin Bell has challenged the fundamentals of journalism that is to be balanced and impartial with what he calls ‘Journalism of Attachment’. He even coined the phrase, ‘bystanders’

  • The NPPA Code Of Ethics In Journalism

    1745 Words  | 4 Pages

    to the NPPA Code of Ethics, when the walls between a source and a writer are breached, the very definition of ‘journalist’ is debated. While breaching those walls may not be considered a ‘correct’ action from a journalist, in extreme cases a journalist should put his or her equipment down and assist those in need, especially if lives are at risk. While it is mainly up to the journalist to decide in a moment what is ‘newsworthy’, PBS Newshour has set out a few ground rules for newsworthiness. The

  • Media Sport Essay

    1389 Words  | 3 Pages

    customs and traditions of social and cultural relationships on a worldwide scale. (De Moragas, 1996) Though there is plenty of literature available analyzing both sport and media, yet there is limited literature on the relationship between sports journalists and sports organizations. Only few scholars have shown interest in this part and it is only because they have been sports media themselves. The relationship with the media is vital, essential and fundamental to the political and cultural economy

  • Jon Stewart's Quest For Objectivity

    1278 Words  | 3 Pages

    the Journalism and New Media program have drawn on. Evidently the older era of journalists take pride in their sense of impartiality, yet most of the younger journalists do not believe that the quest for objectivity is a quixotic. In fact, even if it were plausible, the younger generation often refers to gonzo journalism to get informed. Gonzo journalism, initially founded by Hunter S. Thompson, an American journalist and author, is a form of journalism that avows bias and espouses partiality. Despite

  • What Is News?

    525 Words  | 2 Pages

    While the journalist of this book believes that news is history in its first and best form, the expressions of the passions of the public, or the prejudices of journalist. For me, News it is a way of knowing was going on in the world, most of the time, what I am interested, in it is not what people consider an important event to make the news. In my opinion, news should be a way of relaxing but learning new stuff every day. Another concept in this heading its how important journalists are how influential

  • George Smith Beheading

    741 Words  | 2 Pages

    evolving profession which operates under an unofficial set of guidelines. Journalists, defined by the lecture titled “Foundations”, are tasked with providing truthful and accurate information to the public while weighing this information against potential ethical violations. Pointedly, when applied to the George Smith video, we must weigh the public’s need for information against the potential harm or discomfort it may cause. Journalists are not bound by law to uphold these principles, however, to remain

  • First Amendment Rights, Privacy and the Paparazzi

    666 Words  | 2 Pages

    public, one cannot reasonably expect privacy. Privacy is a right reserved for when one is in private. The rights of paparazzi journalists must be protected to prevent the slow erosion of the rights of all journalists. If we allow the paparazzi to be used as a scapegoat and to be persecuted and regulated it will not be long until the next most radical fringe group of journalists come under fire. This cycle will eventually l...

  • Pros And Cons Of Photojournalism

    1822 Words  | 4 Pages

    Photojournalist Mark Hancock once wrote: “A journalist tells a stories. A photographer takes pictures, a photojournalist takes the best of both and locks it into a powerful medium”(Newton, 236). For many years visuals such as photos have been used to add context to an article, photos can allow the reader to relate and understand the story better. Rather than just reading about an event, photo’s that accompany a story connect the viewer to the story in ways that words cannot. That being said, although

  • Horse Race Journalism Essay

    1426 Words  | 3 Pages

    In theory, political campaigns are the most important culmination of the democratic debate in American politics. In practice, however, the media shrouds society’s ability to engage in a democratic debate with unenlightening campaign coverage. Because of this, it is difficult—if not impossible—to have educated political discourse in which the whole, factual truth is on display. After years of only seeing the drama of presidential campaigns, the American public has become a misinformed people. Media

  • Independent Media and the Internet

    4264 Words  | 9 Pages

    medium was th... ... middle of paper ... ...85684604&dyn=8!xrn_7_0_A85684604?sw_aep=viva_jmu>. “Zimbabwe: Journalist describes his "illegal" detention.” BBC Monitoring International Reports. 6 February 2002. 1 April 2003 <http://web1.infotrac.galegroup.com/itw/infomark/268/613/35524752w1/purl=rc1_ITOF_0_A85327330&dyn=8!xrn_13_0_A85327330?sw_aep=viva_jmu>. “Zimbabwe journalist Mark Chavunduka, 1965-2002.” Ed. Bill Krueger. Winter 2002. Nieman Reports, Harvard University. 2 April 2003.

  • Importance Of Taste And Decency In The Media

    2013 Words  | 5 Pages

    which is what is known as a limit on freedom of expression for journalists. It’s an area that covers issues such as sex, nudity and violence explicit pictorial or video images and is a particular concern on broadcasters, newspapers and magazines. However the topic has become questionable, whether or not the media are using taste and decency concerns as an escape route to censorship. It has become a debate and discussion on how journalists uphold standards of taste and decency that then probably become