Journalism has become a job that brings a great personal reward. In fact, although difficult, difficult (eg physical, emotional, moral, political), it is interesting. News requires a variety of knowledge and skills (Hicks: 2008; Brighton: 2007; Randall: 2007). The purpose of this white paper is to identify the main sources and methods used to collect 332 MC news and close up (aka 332 MC) article structure information and to comment on what I learned. Through this module, various project tasks are completed.
In general, journalism, especially political journalism, is constantly changing in our country and may even be in danger. The core of the problem is not economics of journalism (although it is already in the information age, it has some threat to the freedom of the press). So what is the essence of this crisis? What kind of response is needed? Journalism faces a crisis of public trust, honesty and trust. Complaints about the media will naturally fall into general refusal of elite authority, but as the president's tweets show, their doubts about mainstream media integrity and their power are at least the same.
The journalism industry is the siege industry. In fact, journalism faces two crises at the same time. In the face of increased fake news and clicks and the collapse of advertising models that had supported past journalism, public trust and support for the media has gradually weakened. This was a pinch - out campaign that killed money by stalling viewers. A couple weeks later, a group of young authors The Awl and The Hairpin announced that they had been closed when advertising revenue declined. A year ago, Silicon Valley billionaire Peter Tell was revealed as a secret financial supporter of a devastating lawsuit and destroyed the revolutionary gossip blog Gawker. President Cardo announced a thorough war against the press that he called "enemies of the Americans"; according to opinion polls, one third of Americans agree to his view.