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The birth of public relations

Posted by: | November 25, 2014 | No Comment |
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As the demand increased for news in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, there was a growing need for businesses and other individuals in the public eye to focus on the image portrayed by these outlets. One early public relations campaign that grew incredibly quickly during this time period was in support of men joining the army and of the first World War in general.

In 1917, President Woodrow Wilson created the Committee on Public Information. The group was specifically formed in order to manage the public’s perception of the American war effort at the time. They focused on various methods of spreading Wilson’s message and pushing for support from the public, including the now infamous propaganda posters, word of mouth and press releases.

They managed the news that the press shared about the War through their own writing. Each day, the CPI released a special newspaper called “Official Bulletin” and sent it to various news organizations. They most often focused on positive stories and aspects of America’s involvement in order to keep the public’s spirits up and the approval of the war high.

http://www.authentichistory.com/1914-1920/2-homefront/1-propaganda/Poster-Uncle_Sam-I_Want_You-James_Montgomery_Flagg.jpg

Although the committee’s goal was a positive one, this period is a strong example of the power that media was beginning to obtain over the public’s opinion. This trend continues moving forward, causing sensational stories to spread virally across communities. We can still see its effects today whenever a press conference is held following a major event.

under: Comm 455
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An ode to Steve Klein

Posted by: | November 25, 2014 | No Comment |

Professor Steve Klein is a professor of journalism at George Mason University who has worked as a journalist, media consultant, and sports content specialist during his lengthy career in the field. He specializes in cross-platform communication and has served as coordinator for the Electronic Journalism minor.

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wordpress.com

After graduating from the University of Wisconsin at Madison, Klein worked for a host of other papers throughout the Great Lakes Region and later worked as the senior sports editor at USA Today from 1995 through 1998  During his time there, he spearheaded the paper’s online sports news site which, under his leadership, became one of the best of its kind. Afterwards he worked as a consultant and was a major operator behind the first ever 24-hour sports network.

 

usatoday.com

usatoday.com

In his academic tenure, Klein has taught at several higher education institutions including American University, George Mason University, Cape Cod Community College, and Michigan State, where he later got his masters degree in journalism in 1997. At Mason Klein has taught classes in Political Journalism, News Writing and Reporting, Online Journalism, and Sports Writing. This semester he is teaching a class called History of Journalism: From Gutenberg to Zuckerberg.

naiku.net

naiku.net

In his free time, Klein enjoys cycling and once biked the entire Tour de France route. He is an avid Detroit Red Wings fan, and enjoys visits to his beach house in Delaware.

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under: Comm 455
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New and emerging forms of social media are not only changing the way organizations attract supporters, but are also changing the way we look at politics all together. In essence, nearly all Americans have a cellphone or at least access to a computer these days, and the majority of us have evolved to a much, muchmuch more digital existence. The naked truth is that we’ve gained literally hundreds to thousands of cable TV channels,  satellite radio stations, blogs, and Web pages. The media today are more diffuse, yet more chaotic, than ever.

The result of all these advancements is a new archetype in political communications – and what’s cool (ahem, progressive?) is that both parties are using it. The interesting thing here is that very little of it has to do with expensive political advertising on older mass media, such as television or newspapers. Read further, and you’ll see a few of the ways the new media are changing the political scene from the bottom up:

1. News Selection: Dan Pfeiffer, the White House communications director, recently told the New Yorker, “With the Internet, with YouTube, with TiVo, with cable TV, people are selective viewers now. . . . People approach their news consumption the way they approach their iPod: You download the songs you like and listen to them when you want to listen to them.” What this quote suggests is that we’ve entered an era of pick and choose, meaning we don’t have to sit through a song, movie, or book we don’t like anymore. We can now find the parts of media we want, and can ignore the ones we don’t. Variety is expanding. It’s crazy to think about, huh? One thing is for sure: due to iTunes, music/books/movies will never be the same.

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2. The power of Sharing: Although it’s still in its infancy, the fact of the matter is that sharing through new media outlets has become a novel way of circulating the news – for instance, tweets from the streets of Iran and from the rubble of Haiti have been retweeted hundreds of times, creating a new, virtual form of word of mouth. As well, other examples include the White House’s Facebook page of nearly half a million fan,and its Twitter feed of about 1.7 million followers. The thing to be noted here is that this is no surprise: President Obama was the first candidate to announce his White House run via Web video and his vice presidential pick by text message. With people like Obama leading the world by utilizing new media, it’s fun to think where all this could go. It’s a brave new digit world, in other words.

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3. I “LIKE” It: Liking, the act of clicking on an icon to express your opinion, feelings, or political preference, is rapidly changing the way we define our sense of taste, not to mention our lives. By simply clicking “thumbs up” or “thumbs down,” internet users can give politicians an instant read on opinions and positions posted on their Web pages. This is a sort of a rudimentary straw poll that is faster, cheaper – albeit maybe less accurate – high-priced telephone poll.

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4. Gotta Get Yourself Connected: The level and extent to which people are connecting to one another today is unparalleled throughout history up until this point in time. During the height of demonstrations in Iran, for instance, street organizers tweeted locations that were considered safe for impromptu protests – resulting in “flash mobs”- and working this to great effect. Similarly, last-minute organizational details for tea parties, town hall meetings, and even State of the Union-watching events get posted on Facebook pages and tweeted to supporters. All of this is almost revolutionary, and it sure beats passing out fliers at bus stops, as political organizers did back in the day.

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5. Donate! Donate! Donate! John McCain first harnessed the Internet for fundraising after his 2000 New Hampshire primary victory; by 2007, Ron Paul raised $4 million online in one day, despite being largely ignored by the media. Barack Obama raised hundreds of millions online over the course of his presidential run, and in just the last two weeks of the senatorial race in Massachusetts, Scott Brown raised $12 million from 157,000 donors, according to online consultants Mindy Finn and Patrick Ruffini, who helped Brown. The trend here is clear: most politicians would rather have thousands of individual givers than a few big corporate donors, and the Internet makes that much easier.

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To quote one writer from the The Washington Post, the Internet “has reorganized the way Americans do everything – including the way they elect their leaders. Candidates who would have had no chance before the Internet can now overcome huge odds, with the people they energize serving as the backbone of their campaign,.” In my opinion, it’s actually a very good thing that the new media can deliver a bottom-up boost to candidates facing what are normally quite overwhelming odds. And that far outweighs the supposedly devastating effect of a few big corporate donors buying top-down television ads. What’s interesting is that politicians have always sought to go around the mainstream press filter – from fireside chats, to whistlestop tours, to snail-mail newsletters—but the new forms of media take things a step further by even more precisely connecting them to their constituents. And the technology is developing rapidly. Simply stated, the future of politics regarding new media is unlimited in terms of aptitude. Where we go from here is anyone’s guess, but one thing is for sure: the potential for a more democratic America is infinite, and such an event could be just over the horizon.

under: Comm 455
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Margaret Fuller: first true feminist

Posted by: | November 20, 2014 | No Comment |

http://danassays.wordpress.com/encyclopedia-of-the-essay/fuller-margaret/

America’s first true feminist, Margaret Fuller holds a distinctive place in the cultural life of the American Renaissance. Transcendentalist, literary critic, editor, journalist, teacher, and political activist, ultimately turned revolutionary, she numbered among her close friends the intellectual prime movers of the day: Emerson, Thoreau, the Peabody sisters, the Alcotts, Horace Greeley, Carlyle, and Mazzini–all of whom regarded her with admiration and sometimes even awe.

After visiting Ralph Waldo Emerson in Concord, Margaret Fuller taught for Bronson Alcott in Boston from 1836 to 1837, and then at a school in Providence, Rhode Island. During this time she continued to enlarge both her intellectual accomplishments and personal acquaintances. Moving to Jamaica Plain, a suburb of Boston, in 1840, she conducted her famous “Conversations,” discussion groups that attracted many prominent people from all around Boston from 1840 to 1844.

Margaret Fuller also joined Ralph Waldo Emerson and others to found the Dial, a journal devoted to transcendentalist views in 1840. She became a contributor from the first issue and its editor. Her first book, based on a trip through the Midwest, was Summer on the Lakes (1844) and this led to an invitation by Horace Greeley to be literary critic at the New York Tribune that same year. She published her feminist classic, Woman in the Nineteenth Century, in 1845. In addition to writing a solid body of critical reviews and essays, she became active in various social reform movements. In 1846 she went to Europe as a foreign correspondent for the Tribune, and in England and France she was regarded as a serious intellectual and met many prominent people.

http://www.moonstoneartscenter.org/margaret-fuller-a-new-american-life/

Traveling to Italy in 1847, Margaret Fuller met Giovanni Angelo, the Marchese d’Ossoli, ten years younger and of liberal principles. They became lovers, had a son in 1848, and married the next year. Involved in the Roman revolution of 1848, Fuller and her husband fled to Florence in 1849. They sailed for the United States but the ship ran aground in a storm off Fire Island, New York, and their bodies were never found.

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The sensationalism Dutchman

Posted by: | November 18, 2014 | No Comment |

New York City in 1897 was the center of American journalism.  That center culminated namely between the two newspaper moguls, William Randolph Hearst and Joseph Pulitzer.

Hearst and Pulitzer were consumed in a  constant media war fueled by sensationalism and reflected in yellow journalism.  Current events fell subject as feeders to the tabloid war.  One particular event, was a murder that occurred in the summer of 1897.

Dozens of murders happened in New York City in 1897, but none were considered significant by the press until the body parts of William Guldensuppe were found scattered throughout the city, all pieces turning up with the exception of the head.

Known as “The Scattered Dutchman,” this murder of a nobody immigrant quickly became sensationalized headline news in both Hearst’s New York Journal and Pulitzer’s New York World.

Both papers produced many of the clues to the “who dunnit” game by sending reporters to investigate all aspects of the crime.  Pulitzer offered his readers rewards in exchange for clues to the murder, and Hearst himself went to the suspected crime scene before police did.

The papers were more on top of the case than the police.

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Image from: https://media2.wnyc.org/i/1200/627/c/80/photologue/photos/paper2.jpg

Once the true story of the crime unfolded, the love triangle, the who, what, when and where, media coverage did not stop there.  Pulitzer and Hearst both continued to cover and sensationalize the murders, following up with interviews from inside the jail cell to feed their hungry readers.

What was known as the “Scattered Dutchman” should really be renamed the “Sensationalism Dutchman,” as the dismembered body of William Guldensuppee spurred sensationalism crime reporting in New York in 1897, fueling the media war to new proportions.

 

under: Comm 455
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Best of “Times”

Posted by: | November 18, 2014 | No Comment |

Powerhouse syndicate survives print bust and technology boom.

The New York Times. Need I say more?

Quite frankly, no. The New York Times is the be all and end all of journalism (print or otherwise) and its influence is astronomical. It is the holy grail for aspiring writers and journalists (i.e. me) and has an unparalleled cultural reach. In short, it is “journalism mecca”.

Opinions and bias aside, the New York Times is a syndication giant. It has won 114 Pulitzer prizes and continues to hold solid (albeit, dwindling) ground in this print depleted/technology driven world.

But why? What makes it so special?

The answer is prestige. Prestige makes it marketable and viable. Prestige has been its lifeline. Prestige and professionalism were/are the driving force behind this print giant. The New York Times maintains credibility and status because of its almost flawless track record. It garners respect and ultimately legitimizes newspaper journalism and syndication.

Photo Credit: www.wikipedia.org

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Once upon a time if you wanted to watch a movie you went to your corner cinema. If you wanted to watch TV, you’d sit in front of a big box and watch what was playing. If you wanted to hear the newest music you would wait and listen for it on the radio.

 

The Internet has consequently altered every aspect of that once upon a time.

Now everything is personalized, now everything is “on-demand”, now everything is interactive. So the question remains, what will happen to traditional television, as we know it?

 

Neilson reports determine that the amount of time spent in front of the TV has declined only slightly and according to a business insider article, reports indicate that there is no sign of TV spending slowing down. In fact, television is growing more in absolute dollars than the size of the entire digital video industry.

 

But the fact of the matter is there are very few reasons that people are still sticking with traditional television. Two of the most important being lack of exclusive live events and reliability concerns.

  •  Exclusive events such as live TV shows, sports, breaking news reports and so on.
  • Reliability concerns entailing that there are still issues of delivering without hiccups.

 

However, fixtures to these minute issues are on the way!

Cable companies such as Dish network have recently struck groundbreaking long-term deals with companies such as Disney, ESPN, and ABC that grants dish the right to stream live linear television over the Internet. Although this is a work in progress, it is a step in the direction of altering the need of traditional television.

 

Additionally, Netflix recently announced $1 billion in revenues in the first quarter alone of 2013 and has released a mission statement of where it’s at, where it’s trying to go and how it will get there. Basically, they mentioned in their report that in the coming decades internet-based television will outright replace traditional television.

 

And so a quote that sums it up best,

 

“While most are wondering when the Internet will come to television, I believe the real question is: when will traditional television come to the Internet?”

 

http://fortunedotcom.files.wordpress.com/2012/06/smartphone_tv.jpg

http://fortunedotcom.files.wordpress.com/2012/06/smartphone_tv.jpg

under: Comm 455
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Victorian fashion saves a life

Posted by: | November 18, 2014 | No Comment |

http://oldmagazinearticles.com/hoop-skirt_fashion_article

Thomas Nelson Conrad of Fairfax Court House, Virginia was the third president of Virginia Tech. He played an active role in influencing Blacksburg as the location of choice for the new college, and was a Confederate spy during the American Civil War.

And fashion saved his life.

A troop of Union cavalry watched him enter a house in Northern Virginia. For weeks they had been hunting him, and if found, Captain Thomas Conrad would be hanged.

The lieutenant knocked on the door, and was greeted by an old colored woman and two Southern belles in the height of fashion. They wore heirloom jewelry, tight bodices, and hoop skirts.

The lieutenant looked everywhere until finally he said, “Unless you tell me where he is hiding, I will have to rip your house apart.” The older woman refused, and they ripped the floorboards, walls and ceilings, only to leave empty-handed.

Years after the Civil War, the lieutenant passed by the same house and was confronted by Conrad. Surprisingly, Conrad greeted him saying, “Thank you for doing me the greatest favor of my life.”

The lieutenant looked perplexed so he explained. Conrad had been courting the lady for a while when his men surprised him. In a fit of panic, the older woman motioned for Conrad to hide under her skirt.

After he came out, they were both embarrassed and Conrad convinced her there was only one thing to do: get married the next day.

 

 

 

under: Comm 455, Local news
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Journalism has been used as a form of activism in America pretty much since it was introduced to the colonies in the 18th century. Its use in social issues has proved its purpose in upholding the freedoms of American citizens, and keeping an eye out for those attempting to compromise our lawful rights.

Ida Tarbell was a pioneering journalist in the late 19th to the early 20th century. Not only was she one of the first women journalists, she was one of the first investigative journalists as well.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ida_Tarbell

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ida_Tarbell

Tarbell was the only women in her graduating class at the Allegheny College in 1880. She entered the field of journalism at a time when women’s presence in the profession remained very scarce.

Tarbell was particularly fascinated with big business, and wrote story after story digging into the Rockefeller’s monopoly of the oil industry — a topic which had interested her since the age of 14. Tarbell’s investigations revealed the Rockefeller’s use of unjust business practices in the industry.

Tarbell’s investigation, which was published at length in McClure’s magazine, became “a masterpiece of journalism and an unrelenting indictment that brought down one of history’s greatest tycoons and effectively broke up Standard Oil’s monopoly,” according to one historical report.

Tarbell’s success was very influential during the Progressive Era in bolstering political, economic and social reforms. Her efforts are an early example of how journalism has become the “watchdog” of power.

This practice continues today, through journalists questioning the power of the government and attempting to uphold some element of transparency between those in power and the American citizens. This transparency is continually threatened, however, by the increased ability of the powerful to hide their actions.

Thus now it is possibly as crucial as ever for journalists to continue to act as investigators. While freedom of speech still remains an American right, we must continue to utilize it to its upmost potential, as Tarbell did so many years ago.

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Many people believe that if the Internet didn’t exist, Barack Obama never would have won the Democratic Party’s 2008 nomination, or even more so, the presidency. When he entered the race in February 2007, the then-46-year-old Illinois senator had spent very little time in Washington and was considered a long-shot candidate by many. However, the Obama campaign’s deft use of technology allowed this relatively young and unknown candidate to connect with millions of voters via social media, including Facebook, Twitter and his own campaign Web site. Perhaps even more significant, the Internet helped the Obama campaign break down many of the financial barriers that are commonly associated with an upstart presidential campaign. For example, people spent more than 14.5 million hours watching official videos that Obama staff placed on YouTube. To run these videos on television for the same amount of time would cost an estimated $47 million. Internet technology also revolutionized campaign fundraising by making it easy for anyone to donate small amounts, which added up to one of the best-financed campaigns in history. By the time of the election in 2008, Barack Obama’s campaign raised more than $600 million.

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In addition to changing campaign strategy, the Internet has brought major change to how the public accesses political news and information. Rather than relying on information from the major media, individual voters can simply look up a candidate’s voting record online, or even watch videos of speeches the candidate has made. This not only makes information more accessible, but also helps to hold politicians more accountable for their words anolkd actions.

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Of course, while the Internet brings greater access to information, there’s no guarantee that information found online is true. Some argue that without the standards of professional journalism commonly associated with traditional news sources, unscrupulous bloggers or other sources may promote spurious arguments without fear of consequences. Another concern is that the Internet makes it too easy to deliberately or unintentionally spread outright false information, such as the “Obama’s 50 Lies” chain e-mail that spread like wildfire over the Web during the 2008 campaign. On the other hand, while lies spread easily through e-mail, social media and the Web, those same tools have made it much easier for the average person to research, uncover and expose dubious claims on his or her own initiative.

under: Comm 455
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When the internet goes too far

Posted by: | November 16, 2014 | No Comment |

In my humble opinion (which means my opinion is probably anything but) the internet has officially become a dumping ground for naked photos. We officially live in a world where we want to know what naked celebrities look like, and since they take those sort of pictures it is now possible.

Is there a reason that celebrities feel that we need to see literally every side to they have? Where can the line possibly be drawn? Is there even a line to draw?

Image courtesy of http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-XdhD1XZryxU/UbjBgEAfi2I/AAAAAAAALMA/YlTiTrIUqo8/s1600/funny-naked-bath-cat.jpg.

With the Apple iCloud leak that occured in early September 2014 had widespread publicity. Everyone was searching to see what celebrities had nude photos uploaded.  Of course the celebrities whose photos were leaked as well as other celebrities stood up and said that it was unjust that this leak happened and that the public should respect their privacy as these photos were not meant for the public eye.

Jennifer Lawrence, notable for The Hunger Games films, was one of the celebrities with nude photos leaked. She stood up for herself and said that these were private photos meant for her boyfriend and that they were personal. People were outraged saying that celebrities should not take pictures of themselves that they do not want leaked to the world, because it happens – and it did.

We are always taught in school not to say things that we wouldn’t want others to hear. It really goes both ways with pictures – don’t take pictures you wouldn’t wanted posted! But this simple thought will not stop the cycle, because everyday non-celebrities are taking nude photos and sending them to their significant others as well.

Of course on the other hand, we have Kim Kardashian, a celebrity who would love nothing more than to share her private parts with the world. Celebrities are just like everyday people — except when their nudes get leaked, it gets national publicity. The internet caters to all ages nowadays, and we have to be careful what we post, normal people and celebrities alike.

under: Comm 455
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http://www.biography.com/people/martha-gellhorn-20903335

Martha Ellis Gellhorn (1908-1998) was an American novelist and journalist. She was considered to be one of the greatest war correspondents of the 20th century. She reported on virtually every major world conflict that took place during her 60-year career. 

Gellhorn attended Bryn Mar College in Philidelphia but dropped out in 1927 to pursue journalism, writing early on for New Republic. Soon after, she moved to Paris, where she worked for various publications. She then joined the United Press Bureau, where she sought to become a foreign correspondent. While in Paris, she aligned herself with the pacifist movement and wrote a book about her experience in a novel, What Mad Pursuit (1934).

Amidst all of this, Gellhorn met Hemingway during a 1936 Christmas family trip to Key West. They agreed to travel in Spain together to cover the Spanish Civil War, where Gellhorn was hired to report for Collier’s Weekly. The pair celebrated Christmas of 1937 together in Barcelona.

Gellhorn and Hemingway lived together off and on for four years, before marrying in December 1940. Increasingly resentful of Gellhorn’s long absences during her reporting assignments, Hemingway wrote her when she left their Finca Vegía estate near Havana in 1943, to cover the Italian Front: “Are you a war correspondent, or wife in my bed?” Hemingway himself, however, would later go to the front just before the Normandy landings, and Gellhorn also went, with Hemingway trying to block her travel. When she arrived by means of a dangerous ocean voyage in war-torn London, she told him she had had enough. After four contentious years of marriage, they divorced in 1945.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Martha_Gellhorn

Gellhorn soon went to Western Europe to cover World War II, and in 1944 she allegedly stowed away on a hospital ship to report on the D-Day landings. The next year, she entered Dachau with American troops for the liberation of the infamous concentration camp (that same year, she and Hemingway split up), and her harrowing account was a landmark piece of journalism.

In 1966, she covered the war in Vietnam, which she found supremely disturbing and horrific, full of victims on both sides of the battles lines. In the 1980s she continued to travel extensively, writing about the wars in El Salvador and Nicaragua and the U.S. invasion of Panama, and in the mid-1990s she went to Brazil to write about street children there. That would be her last significant article before her death, as, dying of cancer, she took her own life in 1998.

under: Comm 455

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