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Journal ArticleDOI

THE SOURCE CYCLE: How traditional media and weblogs use each other as sources

Marcus Messner, +1 more
- 24 Apr 2008 - 
- Vol. 9, Iss: 3, pp 447-463
TLDR
This article examined the use of weblogs as sources in the traditional media and weblogs in general, and found that the newspapers increasingly legitimized usblogs as credible sources, and that weblogs heavily relied on traditional media as sources.
Abstract
Research has established that sources have the power to influence the news agenda of the media and that media can under certain circumstances act as sources for each other. This study examined the use of weblogs as sources in the traditional media and the use of sources in weblogs in general. A content analysis of 2059 articles over a six-year period from the New York Times and the Washington Post found that the newspapers increasingly legitimized weblogs as credible sources. A separate content analysis of 120 weblogs found that they heavily relied on the traditional media as sources. By allowing each other to influence their news agendas, there is indication that the traditional media and weblogs create what the researchers introduce and define as a news source cycle, in which news content can be passed back and forth from media to media.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

How New and Assertive Is China's New Assertiveness?

TL;DR: This paper examined seven cases in Chinese diplomacy at the heart of the new assertiveness meme and found that, in some instances, China's policy has not changed; in others, it is actually more moderate; and in still others, a predictable reaction to changed external conditions.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Political Information Cycle in a Hybrid News System: The British Prime Minister and the “Bullygate” Affair:

TL;DR: A weekend in February 2010, just a few weeks before the most closely-watched general election campaign in living memory, British prime minister Gordon Brown became the subject of an extraordi...
Journal ArticleDOI

Social Media References in Newspapers: Facebook, Twitter and YouTube as sources in newspaper journalism

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examine the use and selection of social media as sources in routine newspaper coverage and present a quantitative overview of all the articles published between January 2006 and December 2013 in the print editions of two Flemish (north Belgian) quality newspapers, De Standaard and De Morgen.
Journal ArticleDOI

(re-)discovering the audience

TL;DR: In this paper, a sociological theory of inclusion and a heuristic model of audience inclusion in journalism is presented. But the model does not consider the relationship between journalism and its audience, with consequences not only for journalistic practice, but also for methodological issues of media research.
Journal ArticleDOI

Intermedia Agenda Setting in the Social Media Age: How Traditional Players Dominate the News Agenda in Election Times:

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors propose a news story approach as an alternative way of mapping how news spreads through the media and compare this with a traditional analysis of time-series data.
References
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Book

The Content Analysis Guidebook

TL;DR: The Content Analysis Guidebook provides an accessible core text for upper-level undergraduates and graduate students across the social sciences that unravels the complicated aspects of content analysis.
Journal ArticleDOI

The agenda-setting function of mass media

TL;DR: In choosing and displaying news, editors, newsroom staff, and broadcasters play an important part in shaping political reality as mentioned in this paper, and readers learn not only about a given issue, but also how much importance to attach to that issue from the amount of information in a news story and its position.
Book

Mediating the Message: Theories of Influences on Mass Media Content

TL;DR: In this paper, the influence of media content beyond processes and effects analyzing media content patterns of media contents influences on content from individual media workers influence on media routines influence on content influences on contents from outside of media organizations, influence of ideology linking influences on media content to the effects of content building a theory of news content.