Newspapers
Newspapers are the original form of broadband communication, a distinction not always recognized in the age of the Internet. Long before we had computers, television, radio, telephones and telegraph, newspapers were the cheapest and most efficient way to reach mass audiences with news, commentary and advertising. Newspapers, from their beginnings as hand-printed broadsheets , have been a true random-access medium-readers can move easily and quickly through the different sections of a newspaper, returning to them days or even weeks later. And because a newspapers software consists of a common language, it possesses a universal and timeless quality.
What Did the Growth of TV News Mean to Newspapers?
With the growth of television news in the 1960s, newspapers confronted their first formidable competitor. Today, ABC News claims that more Americans get their news from ABC than from any other source-and its probably true. The United States 1,600 daily newspapers continue to serve millions of readers, but newspapers are no longer the countrys dominant mass medium. How to survive and even flourish in a culture more attuned to electronic media than to printers ink is the most serious issue facing the newspaper industry as it enters the 21st century.
It is safe to say that newspapers are not about to follow the Morse telegraph into oblivion. Newspapers are a portable, convenient medium. No one lugs a computer monitor to the breakfast table to get the morning news. And, newspapers are proving surprisingly adept at reinventing themselves for todays readers by emphasizing good design, color photography and detailed stories that report and interpret current events.
What Exactly Is News and How Does It Work?
Curiously, for a publication called a newspaper, no one has ever coined a standard definition of news. But for the most part, news usually falls under one broad classification-the abnormal. It is human folly, mechanical failures and natural disasters that often make the news .
Reporters are a newspapers front-line eyes and ears. Reporters glean(收集) information from many sources, some public, such as police records, and others private, such as a government informant. Occasionally, a reporter will go to jail rather than reveal the name of a confidential source for a news story. American newspapers proudly consider themselves the fourth branch of government-the watchdog branch -that exposes legislative, executive and judicial misbehavior.
Some reporters are assigned to beats, or an area of coverage, such as the courts, city hall, education, business, medicine and so forth. Others are called general assignment reporters, which means they are on call for a variety of stories such as accidents, civic events and human-interest stories.
In the movies, reporters have exciting, frenzied(狂热的)and dangerous jobs as they live a famous pronouncement of the newspaper business: Comfort the afflicted and afflict the comfortable. Although a few members of the media have been killed as a result of investigations into wrongdoing, newspaper work for the great majority of reporters is routine.
All reporters are ultimately responsible to an editor. Depending on its size, a newspaper may have numerous editors, beginning with an executive editor responsible for the news division. Immediately below the executive editor is the managing editor, the person who oversees the day-to-day work of the news division. Other editors-sports, photo, state, national, features and obituary , for example-may also report to the managing editor.
However, the best known and in some ways the most crucial editor is the city or metro editor. This is the editor that reporters work for directly. The city or metro editor assigns stories, enforces deadlines and is the first to see reporters raw copy on the composition system or computer network. These editors are called gatekeepers, because they control much of what will and will not appear in the next days paper. Often working under the stress of breaking news, their decisions translate directly into the content of the newspaper.
Once the city or metro editor has finished editing a reporters raw copy, the story moves from the composition system via the computer network to another part of the news division, the copy desk. Here, copy editors check for spelling and other errors of usage. They may also look for holes in the story that would confuse readers or leave their questions unanswered.
The copy desk chief routes finished stories to other editors who fit local and wire service stories, headlines and digital photographs onto pages. Newspapers are increasingly doing this work, called pagination , with personal computers using software available at any office supply store. Microsoft Windows, Word and Quark Express are three programs that, though not designed for newspaper production, are easily adapted for it.
What Are the Editorial Pages All About?
A newspaper publishes its views on current events-both local and national-on its editorial pages. This is where editorials, unsigned commentary that reflects the collective position of the newspapers editorial board, appear. Editorials are not news, but rather reasoned opinion based on facts. For example, editorials may criticize the performance of public officials such as the mayor, the police chief, or the local school board; conversely, editorials may praise others for their civic contributions. Whatever the topic, newspapers hope their editorials will raise the level of community discourse.
Two ways this occurs are familiar to any newspaper reader-letters to the editor and op-ed articles . Letters are always among the best-read section of any newspaper, for this is where readers express their opinions. Op-ed articles usually run 850 to 1,000 words. Newspapers make space for letters to the editor and op-ed articles freely available as part of their contribution to civic dialogue.
The editorial pages are under the direction of an editor outside the news division. Newspaper people call this separation of church and state , meaning there is a line between news and opinion that must not be crossed. To do so strips a newspaper of its most valuable asset-credibility. For that reason, editorial page editors at some large newspapers report to the publisher, who is the chief executive officer of the company, and not to the executive editor. Other newspapers may have their editorial page editor reporting to the executive editor. Whatever the organizational model, though, neither department can tell the other what to publish in the newspaper.
How Are Newspapers Distributed?
Responsibility for getting the newspaper from the press to the reader falls to the distribution division. Large newspapers publish two, three or even four editions, all of which must be ready to leave the newspaper plant at a certain time. The first edition, sometimes called the bulldog edition , goes to the outer limits of the newspapers circulation area. This may be several counties or even an entire state. Later editions contain progressively fresher news and go to smaller areas. The final edition, which goes to press after midnight, contains the latest news but covers the smallest geographical area, usually a city.
Any subscriber to a daily newspaper knows that it plops onto the driveway in the wee hours of the morning. Independent contractors called carriers buy copies of the newspaper at a discount and deliver them, using their personal vehicles. The first job for many American youngsters was delivering the afternoon paper in their neighborhood.
The circulation department draws the routes that carriers follow. This department is also responsible for rack sales, newspapers that go into coin-operated dispensers . The circulation department maintains subscribers billing records, stops and starts deliveries upon request, and uses service runners to deliver missing papers.
In 18 hours of highly coordinated work carried out by numerous divisions, what newspaper people call a rough draft of history has moved through computer systems, imaging(成像)machines and presses, to its final destination-the readers. After 3:30 a.m., few people remain at a newspaper plant. All the other divisions have gone home. The presses have fallen silent, perhaps undergoing maintenance for the remainder of the night. The sudden silence will not last long. In less than four hours, the newspaper, as it must do 365 days a year, will rouse from its short sleep and start all over again.
1. What can best describe the characteristics of todays newspapers?
A) They are popular and everlasting.
B) They are original and hand-printed.
C) They are the most important media.
D) They are cheaper and more efficient.
2. What qualities should newspapers possess to survive in the competition against other media?
A) Adaptability and good design.
B) Convenience and adaptability.
C) Good design and color photagraphy.
D) Convenience and color photagraphy.
3. For the most part, news has been classified into ________.
A) police records and a government informant
B) legistative, executive and judicial misbenhavior
C) accidents, civic events and human-interest stories
D) human folly, mechanical failures and natural disasters
4. What endangers the security and life of a journalist?
A) Investigating wrongdoings.
B) Exposing executive mishbehaviors.
C) Revealing confidential news sources.
D) Gleaning information from police records.
5. Whether or not the news story will be on the newspaper is decided by ________.
A) the copy editor
B) the managing editor
C) the executive editor
D) the city or metro editor
6. The newspapers own comments on current events are put on ________.
A) headlines
B) raw copy
C) editorial pages
D) composition system
7. Newspapers make room for letters to the editor and opposite-editorial articles as important devotion to ________.
A) civic dialogue
B) current events
C) public reports
D) private stories
8. The editorial page and the news division are directed by independent editors, which ensures no overstep on the border between _________________.
9. Among the different editions of a large newspaper, the one that reachers the smallest circulation area is the _________________.
10. To deliver newspapers to the subscribers, camers use their vehicles and follow the routes desiged by the ________________.
做个成年人有哪些好处?
体坛英语资讯:Chinese mens team secure final berth in 4X100m realy at worlds
国内英语资讯:Xi extends condolences to Egypts Sisi over deadly train collision
国内英语资讯:Chinese top legislator meets Croatian parliament speaker
体坛英语资讯:Chinese third leg runner gets hit on head in 4x100m final
国内英语资讯:China Brand Show to promote economic, trade exchanges between China, Rwanda
国内英语资讯:China, Kazakhstan to expand cooperation in multiple areas, boost ties
体坛英语资讯:Peng Cheng/Jin Yang win pairs figure skating at 2019 Shanghai Trophy
体坛英语资讯:LA City Council approves contracts with IOC to host 2028 Olympics
国内英语资讯:China calls on U.S., DPRK to refrain from escalating tensions on Korean Peninsula
美文赏析:我的生活被手机绑架了
5个心理学方法,帮你戒掉吃肉
比伯追女孩遭拒!巨星的魅力并非不可阻挡
大型防晒喷雾机,10秒钟搞定全身!
小李子将主演达芬奇传记电影
国内英语资讯:Xi urges restraint on Korean nuclear issue in phone talk with Trump
国内英语资讯:China, Pakistan vow to further deepen bilateral pragmatic cooperation
关于凯特王妃的第三胎,英国人先掐起架来了
体坛英语资讯:Qatar wins first gold, American Muhammad sets 400m hurdles WR in Doha
国内英语资讯:China Focus: China fights for final victory over poverty
英国王室着装守则大揭秘
中国禁止网售电子烟 遏制未成年人吸食
英大学申请人数大幅下降 多所名牌高校或降线招生
国内英语资讯:Expert denies links between Sichuan quake and Three Gorges Dam
体坛英语资讯:Sad endings for Bolt and Farah as London worlds continue to surprise
中国沙滩神器“脸基尼”或将引领澳大利亚夏日热潮
国内英语资讯:Chinese premier calls for joint efforts to keep East Asian cooperation on right track
体坛英语资讯:Madrid coach Zidane confirms new contract
租衣服比买衣服更环保吗?专家:不一定
体坛英语资讯:Murray out, Barty & Osaka through to China Open semifinals
| 不限 |
| 英语教案 |
| 英语课件 |
| 英语试题 |
| 不限 |
| 不限 |
| 上册 |
| 下册 |
| 不限 |