![]() ![]() I offer my sincerest thanks to all those who helped me in writing Journalism and New Media. Seymour Topping, administrator of the Pulitzer Prizes and professor of International Journalism at the Graduate School of Journalism of Columbia University The wealth of information and analysis Professor Pavlik brings to bear in his impressive book reassures us that his optimism is not misplaced. He believes that on balance journalism, with the tools of new media, can play a larger and more useful role in our society. While his book serves as a very useful reference on everything from organizing a New Age newsroom to job hunting in new media, the general reader may be most impressed by Professor Pavlik’s evocative passages on the positive and negative forces that will shape journalism in the digital age. He does not minimize the enormous problems ahead in managing the Internet, certifying what is reliable, and maintaining standards as media Web sites compete in continuous news coverage. In practical terms he tells us how journalists in their reporting and storytelling as well as the business practices of their managers will have to adapt to an increasingly networked world. In exploring the potential of contextualized journalism, with its use of new digital capabilities in video and audio, Professor Pavlik argues convincingly that these techniques offer opportunities for the practice of better journalism, which will bolster public faith in the media. John Pavlik has provided us with a comprehensive and invaluable guide to understanding and utilizing new media in journalism. Contextualized Journalism: Implications for the Evolving Role of Journalists in the Twenty-first Century 217 Notes Job Prospects in Online JournalismĪfterword. New Media and Journalism Education: Preparing the Next Generation 193 13. Implications of Intelligent Agents for Journalism: Ghosts in the Machine 183 12. Long-Term Consequences of the Telecommunications Act of 1996: New Rules of the Game 161 11. Part V: Implications for the Future: The Telecommunications Act, Intelligent Agents, and Journalism Practice and Education 159 10. ![]() Audiences Redefined, Boundaries Removed, Relationships Reinvented 125 9. Digital Television and Video News: A Crisis of OpportunityĨ. Newsroom for a New Age: Managing the Virtual Newsroomħ. Part III: Restructuring the Newsroom and the News Industry 99 6. A Reporter’s Field Guide to the Internet 5. Part II: Transforming How Journalists Do Their Work 47 3. Transforming Storytelling: From Omnidirectional Imaging to Augmented Reality 3 2. Introduction: Understanding the Impact of New Media on Journalism xi Part I: Altering News Contentġ. Printed in the United States of America c 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 p 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1įoreword by Seymour Topping Acknowledgments PN4784.E 070.4⬘0285-dc21 AĬasebound editions of Columbia University Press books are printed on permanent and durable acid-free paper. Includes bibliographical references and index. Columbia university press Publishers Since 1893 New York Chichester, West Sussex Copyright 䉷 2001 Columbia University Press All rights reserved Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Pavlik, John Vernon. ![]()
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