Media and Apocalypse: News Coverage of the Yellowstone Forest Fires, Exxon Valdez Oil Spill, and Loma Prieta Earthquake
By (Author) Conrad G. Smith
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
26th October 1992
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Film, TV and Radio industries
070.4
Hardback
228
Width 156mm, Height 235mm
510g
This text is a critical examination of how newspaper and television journalists reported three catastrophes: the 1988 forest fires in and near Yellowstone National Park; America's largest oil spill on March 24, 1989 in Alaska's Prince William Sound; and California's most expensive earthquake, south of San Fransisco on October 17, 1989. The focus is on the processes by which journalists identified news sources and gathered data, on the professional values of the journalists and on the ways in which those values contributed to or interfered with good reporting. The book is based on examination of several thousand newspaper and television stories, on news accounts by independent experts, on personal visits to the sites of the catastrophes, and on interviews with more than 100 reporters, correspondents, producers, editors, and their sources. Conrad Smith's scholarly goal is to provide a theoretical understanding of the process by which reporters gather information for these kinds of stories and thus to identify changes in the journalistic routine that might encourage more accurate and comprehensive coverage of public issues. He shows how television reports sometimes influence the ways print reporters structure their stories, an effect he calls "journalistic priming". He examines the ways in which Pulitzer Prize-winning stories are different from others, and attempts to integrate reporters' and sources' comments with the theoretical literature. This is the first book-length effort that uses a single research design to compare how both print and television journalists covered several major events, and to examine the interrelationship between the television and newspaper reporting. Other scholars often ignore one or the other, as though the two media operated independently.
This is a balanced and careful assessment of the role of media in a time when most depend on them--in times of considerable stress.-Communication Booknotes
"This is a balanced and careful assessment of the role of media in a time when most depend on them--in times of considerable stress."-Communication Booknotes
CONRAD SMITH is Associate Professor of Journalism at The Ohio State University. A television photographer and editor in the early 1970s, he was frustrated by the failure of his efforts to portray events accurately and enrolled in a Ph.D. program hoping to learn why that was so difficult. His research about journalists and their professional values have appeared in Journalism Quarterly and the Journal of Broadcasting.