Description

Book Synopsis
In an era where the way people get news is ever-changing, how do broadcast journalists work? How do changes to the field affect journalists at traditional public broadcasters? And what similarities are there between license-funded news programs--like those on the BBC--and commercial news? This book, built on years of unique access to the newsrooms of BBC News and ITV News in the United Kingdom and DR TV Avisen and TV2 Nyhedeme in Denmark, answers those questions and more. Exploring the shared professional ideals of journalists, the study analyzes how they conceive of stories as important, and how their ideals relating to their work are expressed and aspired to in everyday practice.

Table of Contents

Part I: Journalists and Newsrooms as Objects of Research

Introduction

Chapter 1: Studying Journalists at Work

1.1 Review of News Production Studies

1.2 Journalism as a Profession

1.3 Media Anthropology with a Focus on Production

1.4 Conclusions

Part II: An Anthropologist Among Journalists

Chapter 2: Anthropology as a Method of Studying Journalists at Work

2.1 Entering the Newsroom

2.2 Conducting Fieldwork

2.3 Access: A Constant Negotiation

2.4 The Obstacle of Imagining Differences but Finding Similarities

2.5 The Interview

2.6 Presenting the Field

27 Conclusions

Part III: Introducing the Four News Divisions and a Relationship of Constant Competition

Chapter 3: Talking About Differences: How News Workers Define Themselves and Each Other

3.1 Monopoly and Duopoly of Broadcasting

3.2 Being ‘Best’ as Boundary-making

3.3 A Shared Struggle

3.4 When Broadcasters Agree

3.5 Conclusions

Part IV: Inside the New Newsrooms

Chapter 4: A New Design of the Old Newsroom

4.1 The Market Logic of Changing the Newsroom

4.2 Inside the Newsroom: Spatial Layout

4.3 Inside the Newsroom: Editorial Meetings

4.4 Conclusions

Chapter 5: Negotiating the Newsroom

5.1 Negotiating the Stage

5.2 A Room Where Someone Is Always Watching

5.3 The Stage is Set

5.4 ‘Multi-skilling’ as the Term for What Went Wrong

5.5 Conclusions

Part V: New Struggles and Old Ideals

Chapter 6: The Unity and Community of Journalists

6.1 Following Connections between the Newsrooms

6.2 Communities of Practice and the Imagined Colleagues

6.3 The Constant Peer Review

6.4 How Pride and a Distance to The Others Unites

6.5 Conclusions

Chapter 7: The ‘Good’ Journalist: An Old Ideal

7.1 A Shared Value

7.2 Good Work as a Public Service

7.3 The ‘Good News Story’

7.4 Good Work as ‘Very Scout-Like’

7.5 Conclusions

Part VI: Exiting the Newsroom

Chapter 8: Conclusion: A Profession Under Pressure

8.1 Connections Across Newsrooms

8.2 New Struggles to Reach Old Ideals?

8.3 Methodological Considerations

8.4 Primary Contributions

Epilogue

Summary

Appendix

References

Index

Inside the TV Newsroom: Profession Under Pressure

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    A Paperback / softback by Line Hassall Thomsen

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      View other formats and editions of Inside the TV Newsroom: Profession Under Pressure by Line Hassall Thomsen

      Publisher: Intellect Books
      Publication Date: 15/07/2018
      ISBN13: 9781783208838, 978-1783208838
      ISBN10: 178320883X

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      In an era where the way people get news is ever-changing, how do broadcast journalists work? How do changes to the field affect journalists at traditional public broadcasters? And what similarities are there between license-funded news programs--like those on the BBC--and commercial news? This book, built on years of unique access to the newsrooms of BBC News and ITV News in the United Kingdom and DR TV Avisen and TV2 Nyhedeme in Denmark, answers those questions and more. Exploring the shared professional ideals of journalists, the study analyzes how they conceive of stories as important, and how their ideals relating to their work are expressed and aspired to in everyday practice.

      Table of Contents

      Part I: Journalists and Newsrooms as Objects of Research

      Introduction

      Chapter 1: Studying Journalists at Work

      1.1 Review of News Production Studies

      1.2 Journalism as a Profession

      1.3 Media Anthropology with a Focus on Production

      1.4 Conclusions

      Part II: An Anthropologist Among Journalists

      Chapter 2: Anthropology as a Method of Studying Journalists at Work

      2.1 Entering the Newsroom

      2.2 Conducting Fieldwork

      2.3 Access: A Constant Negotiation

      2.4 The Obstacle of Imagining Differences but Finding Similarities

      2.5 The Interview

      2.6 Presenting the Field

      27 Conclusions

      Part III: Introducing the Four News Divisions and a Relationship of Constant Competition

      Chapter 3: Talking About Differences: How News Workers Define Themselves and Each Other

      3.1 Monopoly and Duopoly of Broadcasting

      3.2 Being ‘Best’ as Boundary-making

      3.3 A Shared Struggle

      3.4 When Broadcasters Agree

      3.5 Conclusions

      Part IV: Inside the New Newsrooms

      Chapter 4: A New Design of the Old Newsroom

      4.1 The Market Logic of Changing the Newsroom

      4.2 Inside the Newsroom: Spatial Layout

      4.3 Inside the Newsroom: Editorial Meetings

      4.4 Conclusions

      Chapter 5: Negotiating the Newsroom

      5.1 Negotiating the Stage

      5.2 A Room Where Someone Is Always Watching

      5.3 The Stage is Set

      5.4 ‘Multi-skilling’ as the Term for What Went Wrong

      5.5 Conclusions

      Part V: New Struggles and Old Ideals

      Chapter 6: The Unity and Community of Journalists

      6.1 Following Connections between the Newsrooms

      6.2 Communities of Practice and the Imagined Colleagues

      6.3 The Constant Peer Review

      6.4 How Pride and a Distance to The Others Unites

      6.5 Conclusions

      Chapter 7: The ‘Good’ Journalist: An Old Ideal

      7.1 A Shared Value

      7.2 Good Work as a Public Service

      7.3 The ‘Good News Story’

      7.4 Good Work as ‘Very Scout-Like’

      7.5 Conclusions

      Part VI: Exiting the Newsroom

      Chapter 8: Conclusion: A Profession Under Pressure

      8.1 Connections Across Newsrooms

      8.2 New Struggles to Reach Old Ideals?

      8.3 Methodological Considerations

      8.4 Primary Contributions

      Epilogue

      Summary

      Appendix

      References

      Index

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