In three pages the impacts of the mass media especially in terms of comparisons between television and print media are discussed. There are five bibliographic sources cited.
Name of Research Paper File: MH11_MHNewsM3.rtf
Unformatted Sample Text from the Research Paper:
the Impacts of the Mass Media Research Compiled by 10/2001 Please Broadcast news
can be defined as any news piece, story or program that is developed for television, radio or film distribution, while print news is any news that is provided in written
form. Across the United States, millions of Americans read newspapers on a daily basis, but almost 10 times that watch television news programs, television magazine programs or listen to
radio broadcasts each day. As a result, broadcast news has become a powerful took in influencing public opinion, shaping views of particular issues, and defining trends in the United
States. The elections of the modern era, for example, are said to have been significantly influenced by broadcast news, with candidates that have been made or broken by support
for their campaign by television and radio broadcasters. What makes these individuals so influential, and how has broadcast news changed the way news is perceived and integrated into the American
consciousness? In order to consider these questions, it is necessary to consider the way in which broadcast news and print news differ in their presentation of information and the
influence of the mass media, especially television, in defining the perspectives on certain issues. One of the misnomers of the mass media is that broadcast news and print news are
unbiased resources that simply report the news. Though there is an ethical call for unbiased reporting, this is much more common in print news, where there is a greater
call for accountability. For example, the news coverage of the September 11 terrorist activities that ended in the destroying of the World Trade Center towers and damage at the Pentagon