- •If you don't read the newspaper, you are uninformed. If you do read the newspaper, you are misinformed.
- •I wish there was a knob on the tv so that you could turn up the intelligence. They’ve got one marked "brightness", but it doesn't work, does it?
- •I ntroduction
- •1.1. Print media
- •Spine jacket subscription foreword issue binder edition quarterly
- •1.2. The newspaper: types and structure
- •1.3. The rise of the newspaper industry
- •The Rise of the Newspaper Industry
- •William Randolph Hearst (1863-1951)
- •Пулитцеровская премия
- •1.4. Reading newspapers
- •1.5. The british and american press
- •The british and american press
- •1.6. The news: gathering and delivering
- •1.7. From event to story – making it to the news
- •1.8. Newspapers in britain
- •Newspapers in britain
- •1.9. Newspaper headline language
- •1.10. The british newspaper market
- •The british newspaper market
- •1. National Daily and Sunday Papers
- •2. Local and Regional Papers
- •3. The Weekly and Periodical Press
- •1.11. A journalistic code
- •A Journalistic Code
- •The Public's Right to Know?
- •1.12. Interview with nigel dempster
- •1.13. Getting into the news
- •A Tabloid Experience
- •Press Invasion
- •1.14. Newspapers, inane sheets of gossip
- •Newspapers, inane sheets of gossip
- •1.15. The future of newspapers
- •The Future of Newspapers
- •1.16. Revision
- •2.1. Television
- •2.2. A national disease?
- •A National Disease?
- •2.3. The story of tv broadcasting
- •The Story So Far
- •2.4. Tv news
- •2.5. Radio and television
- •British Radio and Television
- •Radio and Television in great britain and the usa
- •2.7. Interview with Joanna Bogle
- •2.8. Censorship
- •2.9. Children under the influence of the media
- •2.10. Children and television
- •2.11. Print journalism versus electronic journalism
- •Print Journalism versus Electronic Journalism
- •2.12. Revision
- •3.1. Media and advertising
- •Illegible manuscript prose unprintable
- •Implicit catchy jingles exploit ubiquitous
- •3.2. Advertising language
- •3.3. Advertising tricks
- •Advertising tricks
- •1. "Before and after"
- •3.4. Advertising media
- •Advertising Media
- •3.5. Revision
- •Век свободы не видать?
- •A letter to the editor
- •Writing a comment
- •Academic writing 1
- •Academic writing 2
- •Agreement, disagreement and compromise
- •Comparison and contrast
- •Signpost expressions for discussions
- •In the course of a discussion there definitely come moments when some clarification is asked for and given.
- •If you are asked awkward questions, the following phrases may be useful:
1.3. The rise of the newspaper industry
Task 1. Before reading the text, find answers to the following questions:
What is a Linotype machine? How did it revolutionize the printing process?
What yearly event was established by Joseph Pulitzer, a prominent journalist? Elaborate.
Task 2. Read the text and translate it in the written form.
The Rise of the Newspaper Industry
Growth of newspapers and magazines. In the period between 1870 and 1900, the number of daily newspapers in the country increased from 600 to nearly 2500. Their circulation multiplied by six times - a jump far greater than the growth in population. This huge expansion reflected gains in the reading ability of great segments of the population and a growing interest in the world beyond the local community. It also reflected a new trend in journalism.
Several important mechanical inventions made it possible to print newspapers as well as magazines and books in greater numbers and at lower costs. Most important of these inventions were the typewriter, improved printing presses, and the Linotype, a fast and efficient typesetting machine invented by Ottmar Mergenthaler in 1885.
Mass circulation was also stimulated by the rapidly developing art of advertising. Businessmen were ready to advertise, but they insisted that newspapers and magazines in which they advertised have a mass circulation. The desire to secure advertising stimulated publishers to capture an ever-wider reading public. Thus the publishers used more and more “popular” articles written in a “catchy” style to attract the largest possible number of readers.
New leaders and new trends. Three of the outstanding leaders of the new trend in journalism were Charles A. Dana, Joseph Pulitzer, and William Randolph Hearst.
D
Charles
Anderson Dana
(1819-1897)
Joseph Pulitzer
(1847-1911)
Hearst, who was Pulitzer's chief rival, outdid Pulitzer at his own game. The son of a self-made California millionaire, Hearst bought the New York Journal 1895 and ran up its circulation beyond that of any other paper. Hearst denounced the irresponsibility and selfishness of some of the well-to-do and so appealed to the masses of people. But his special success rested on his ability to hire gifted feature writers, able sports reporters, and popular comic artists. His success also rested upon his ability to get the most sensational news before anyone else and to play it up for all it was worth - frequently for far more than it was worth. The use by both Hearst and Pulitzer of a comic strip in colour featuring a character named the "Yellow Kid" is said to have given the name of "yellow journalism" to excessive sensationalism in newspapers.