CourseNotes
Published on CourseNotes (https://course-notes.org)

Home > Media influence in Government

Media influence in Government

Subject: 
US Gov and Politics [1]
Rating: 
0
No votes yet
SocialTags: 
Digital media [2]
Human–computer interaction [3]
Information Age [4]
World Wide Web [5]
Internet [6]
CNote [7]
Humanities [8]
Technology [9]

1. The idea that journalists do not provide a negative slant on their political reporting is false. This is because the issues they report is not proportional to reality this inevitably leads to an innate negative slant in political reporting. For example, the selective nature of the media to choose stories about scandals over stories covering the small triumphs of everyday politics inaccurately represents the true effects of Congress. Therefore, selective reporting leads to inherent negative slants. 2. Yes, it is important for citizens to understand political tactics in a campaign but the media overemphasizes these tactics because they spend more time on discussing the tactics than the actual problems and issues the nation faces.

Wait just a minute here...

In order to access these resources, you will need to sign in [10] or register [11] for the website (takes literally 1 minute!) and contribute [12] 10 documents to the Course-Notes.Org library. Until you contribute 10 documents, you'll only be able to view the titles of the uploaded documents.

  • Unlock Course-Notes.org

    Gain access to members only, premium content that includes past essays, DBQs, practice tests, term papers, homework assignments and other vital resources for your success!
  • Interact with other members

    Receive feedback from the Course-Notes.Org community on your homework assignments
  • Participation = Points

    Earn points for by contributing documents to the library, helping other members, writing informative blog posts, and voting in polls!

There are over 10,000 documents that have been added to the Members Only section that you won't find anywhere on this site or on the interwebs, for that matter. In order to access these resources, you will need to register [11] for the website (takes literally 1 minute!) and earn 100 cnote$ (use the table above to figure that out). Until you contribute earn 100 cnote$, you'll only be able to view the titles of the uploaded documents and some teaser text.

Get started right now! [11]


Source URL:https://course-notes.org/us_gov_and_politics/premium/media_influence_in_government#comment-0

Links
[1] https://course-notes.org/subject/us_gov_and_politics [2] https://course-notes.org/taxonomy/term/1039057 [3] https://course-notes.org/taxonomy/term/1039046 [4] https://course-notes.org/taxonomy/term/1039047 [5] https://course-notes.org/taxonomy/term/1039048 [6] https://course-notes.org/taxonomy/term/1039060 [7] https://course-notes.org/taxonomy/term/1039049 [8] https://course-notes.org/taxonomy/term/1038961 [9] https://course-notes.org/taxonomy/term/1038947 [10] https://course-notes.org/user [11] https://course-notes.org/user/register [12] https://course-notes.org/node/add/upload/bulk