Broadcast journalism

Air America Radio is a full-service radio network and program radio syndication service in the United States, started on March 31, 2004. It features a liberal, left-wing, progressive point of view and specializes in presentations and monologues by liberal personalities, guest interviews, calls by listeners, and news reports. Some of the personalities who host shows on Air America Radio include Al Franken, Robert Kennedy, Jr., Mike Papantonio, Laura Flanders, Rachel Maddow, Sam Seder, Janeane Garofalo, Mike Malloy, Randi Rhodes, Thom Hartmann,and Jerry Springer. ...more on Wikipedia about "Air America Radio"

Breakfast television ( UK) or morning show ( U.S.) is a type of news and entertainment television program, broadcast live in the morning (typically between 6:00am and 9:00am). Often hosted by a small "team" of male and female hosts, morning shows typically target the combined demographic of people getting ready for work, and stay-at-home adults and parents. ...more on Wikipedia about "Breakfast television"

Broadcast journalism refers to television news and radio news, as well as the online news outlets of broadcast affiliates. ...more on Wikipedia about "Broadcast journalism"

Current Affairs is a genre of broadcast journalism where the emphasis is on detailed analysis and discussion of news stories that have recently occurred or are ongoing at the time of broadcast. ...more on Wikipedia about "Current affairs (news format)"

Double-ender refers to a technique used to conduct televised interviews over long distances in the 1980s before satellite television became commonplace, in order to provide video to what would otherwise be an audio-only interview. It was commonplace in such news programs as The Journal on CBC Television. ...more on Wikipedia about "Double-ender"

A satellite media tour is a technique used by corporations (primarily) to provide an "expert" of their choosing to local television news broadcasts for often-live interaction, with the goal of getting a specific message out. Satellite media tours are related to, and often used in conjunction with, Video News Releases. For example, a special version of an satellite media tour interview is often edited and distributed as a video news release, with the broadcaster adding in their own additional voice-over. Co-op Satellite media tours, a common form, use one expert to make recommendations funded by more than one client, all under one category (eg "Four Great Ideas for Cleaning Your Bathroom"). ...more on Wikipedia about "Satellite media tour"

In film and broadcasting, a soundbite is a very short piece of footage taken from a longer speech or an interview in which someone with authority or the average "man on the street" says something which is considered by those who edit the speech or interview to be a most important point. As the context of what is being said is missing, the insertion of soundbites into news broadcasts or documentaries is open to manipulation and thus requires a very high degree of journalistic ethics. Politicians of the new generation are carefully coached by their spin doctors to produce on demand soundbites which are clear and to the point. ...more on Wikipedia about "Soundbite"

Tabloid television is similar to tabloid newspapers. Tabloid television newscasts usually incorporate flashy graphics and sensationalistic stories, some with little or no local relevance. Often, there is a heavy emphasis on crime, stories with good video, and celebrity news. ...more on Wikipedia about "Tabloid television"

Television news refers to the practice of disseminating current events via the media of television. News Bulletins are programmes lasting from seconds to hours that provide updates on world, national, regional or local news events. Television channels may provide news bulletins as part of a regular programme that is aired daily or more often at standard times. Less often, television shows may be interrupted or replaced by "news flashes" to provide news updates on current events of great importance or sudden events of great importance. ...more on Wikipedia about "Television news"

Two-way communication between means that information is flowing in both directions between two parties. ...more on Wikipedia about "Two-way"

Television news programming in the U.S. can be separated into three different categories: local news, network news, and cable news. ...more on Wikipedia about "U.S. television news"

A video news release (VNR) is a public relations or a propaganda technique whereby a video or radio program is produced, edited and distributed to ...more on Wikipedia about "Video news release"

Vox populi, which means literally in Latin voice of the people, is often used in broadcasting for interviews of members of the 'general public'; usually the interviewees are shown in public places, and supposed to be giving spontaneous opinions in a chance encounter — unrehearsed persons, not selected in any way. As such, they are almost always referred to by broadcast journalists as the abbreviated vox pop. ...more on Wikipedia about "Vox populi"

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