Friday, October 30, 2015

Comment Response: Emma Pagni

I just read one of my classmates lecture responses http://freshoffthepresswithemma.blogspot.com/  and I have to say I do agree with her. The TV lecture was a lot of information I had already heard prior... but then... Politics got involved. I had never realized the impact TV had on politics, much like Emma. I do agree that it did get very interesting there and that it too helped me "connect the dots." I like how Emma expressed her own opinions in the response as well as clearing things up for me too. 

News Response: Data Totals

Today in class we added up each category that we've collected over the month.As we were analyzing the data I realized WHAS isn't the only news station that completely sucks. They all seem to lack the ability of covering important stories and it is most likely due to laziness of the station causing them to break the yardstick of enterprise. It is ridiculous. We are in the middle of an election season yet that is only a small portion of the coverage (Only 7.41% of total coverage including all publications). All of the publications choose the easy way out, especially WLKY, by making most of their news stories about crime ( __% of total coverage including all publications). Now that the data is clear to me I can make the conclusion that if you want better news, go to the Courier Journal. Though it is still not up to standards, it is much better than any of the broadcasts or online sources. 

Comment Response: Maya Malawi

Maya Malawi did  a post on her blog http://mnm4jc.blogspot.com/  about the poor variety in stories. She was in a group studying WLKY and learned that around 40% of it's coverage over the ten data collections was strictly dedicated to crime. I, personally, was in a sharing group with Maya and every week it was the same joke-- How many crime stories Maya? Is the headline a murder? It was pretty pathetic how expected it was to write a large number in the crime section and how exciting it was when the headline actually mattered. Though I thought Maya's response was short, it was to the point and it was certainly true.

Wednesday, October 28, 2015

News Response: National vs. Local

As I tuned into the news Sunday night, October 25th, I found myself extremely excited because there was a national story being covered. It was strange for me to be so happy over a single story but it was the first time WHAS had two national stories out of the nine data collections and the first time in four collections there has been one national story. WHAS doesn't do a good job covering important, national topics. Now, I don't think it's fair to say it's their job to cover a certain amount because it is a local station. However, other stations are doing much better, proving it can be done. On October 11th, WAVE had two national stories, WLKY had five, WDRB had four, and WHAS fell short with only one. This was the firat time it had ever had a national story and would remain the only time for a long while. National stories can be covered... So why is WHAS not doing so?    

News Response: The Weather Block

The fast-forward button on my remote is almost completely broken and it is WHAS' fault. Every other night I tune into the news and I watch all of it. But I am not watching much at all... Each time I watch I have to skip at least two, usually three, four minute weather blocks and a full sports block which is about eight minutes long at the end of the broadcast. When you add the three or four blocks together you get about sixteen or eighteen minutes dedicated to nothing but the temperature and sports scores. Over half of the show is spent not even attempting to get news!  I don't know if it's due to the laziness of the station or other factors, but it certainly isn't because there is a lack in news considering each and every time the other stations get a significantly greater amount of stories. 

News Response: Expectations

Growing up, my family would watch WHAS in the morning before they went to work and at night before dinner. Because of this, the slogan " 11@11" was stuck in  the back of my head while choosing our news groups to examine. I was the first of my class to pick and I decided to go with the most familiar thinking it was also the best. I was horribly wrong. The first night of tuning in I was thoroughly disappointed. Now that I had learned what good journalism was after our yardsticks/elements lecture, I was able to notice all the problems with the news and conclude my own opinion. On September 30th, 2015, the first night we began collecting data, there were a total of six stories. This was low in comparison to WAVE with nine, WLKY with fourteen, WDRB with twenty-one, and the courier journal with twenty. I had expectations and WHAS failed to meet them.

Friday, September 18, 2015

Sharyl Attkisson: The Same Subjects, Biased Reporting
"Untouchable subjects, fearless reporting" is the description of Sharyl Atkisson's personal journalism website. But when every subject is the same and the reporting isn't even truly investigative, there is reason to have problems with her being a good journalist. 

Good journalism abides by all ten elements and seven yardsticks, but in a series of articles written by Attkisson you can see she breaks many of them such as fairness or verification, newsworthiness, and inclusiveness.  

The Last Days at CNN

Sharyl Attkisson resigned from her job at CNN because she felt the organization was failing to cover news on the democratic party because she thought they were liberally biased. What's ironic about all of this is that she is the one who is failing to meet the element of verification. Sharyl conveys obvious signs of being biased just by looking at her website. On the site you see many stories covering the democratic party, often attacking President Obama, but not as many covering the republican side. 

The First Article: Support for Trump

One of the most recent articles is "Donald's Duck: 7 Reasons Why nothing Sticks to Teflon Trump" in this article she lists claims that people who oppose Trump supposedly say (none of these were sited) and basically why they're wrong. However, in some of her responses she would simply dodge the statement as if it didn't matter anymore... which isn't how it was intended to work.

One of the points in particular caught my attention, "#5. Trump personally insults people." In her response she went around the point saying "... his penchant for insult outweighs the skillset he has to accomplish things that matter."  Now, people may truly think this, (but we wouldn't know because she doesn't say who she gets these comments from) but she didn't disprove the point or even try. Her "reporting" she did on this "news" was so minimal that the informational article turned into her using her own opinions to argue the opposing side. In a single article Attkisson has failed to be objective, cover what is newsworthy, and provide context. This is not good journalism.

The Second Article: Attacking Healthcare

As I was scrolling through the portion on her website entitled "NEWS" I found an entry that was nowhere near what news is. This entry was a short description of a forum she put on the site. The forum was called, "Obamacare Fail Stories." Not, "Obamacare Stories," or "How Healthcare Affected the People?" but a single forum on the negative side of healthcare. Sharyl could've easily made the forum include stories from people that had positive views on the subject to get that fairness and all sides of the story but she did not do this. This was another story with two yardsticks broken: Fairness, and Newsworthiness.

Change

 To continue about her career she needs to stop, read up on the ten elements and seven yardsticks, and ask herself (or me) what she is doing wrong. Maybe then she will realize how she fails to cover both sides of a story, report on newsworthy topics, report at all, and site her sources. 

Thursday, September 17, 2015

Peer Response: Mattie Townson

I really like Mattie's thoughts on the positives of demassification and how she thought of how the media world has changed because of it. She gave insight on the good of it and I never thought of it in a positive light. She also related it to TV channels which was understandable and relatable. She did an all-around good job on it and I am glad I took the time to read it.