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    Contextualizing the News: Newspaper Front Pages in the Age of Fact-Checking Journalism.

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    Date
    2018-12-01
    Author
    Sen, Srijan
    Department
    Media Studies
    Advisor(s)
    David Allen
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    Abstract
    This thesis investigates influences on the selection of stories on the front pages of newspapers. It investigates whether a daily newspaper that has an in-house, fact-checking unit (The Milwaukee (WI) Journal Sentinel) selects front-page stories differently from a newspaper that does not have an in-house, fact-checking unit (The Star Tribune in Minneapolis, MN). While the study found no direct influence of fact-checking journalism, it did find that newspaper front pages in 2014 were increasingly prioritizing contextual stories over conventional stories. It also found a decline in political/governmental stories on front pages. It is suggested that these changes might signal a changing role for newspaper journalism within society, shifting away from the delivery of information and putting more emphasis on the analysis of information.
    Subject
    fact checking
    front pages
    journalism
    newspaper
    reporters
    Permanent Link
    http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1793/92203
    Type
    thesis
    Part of
    • UW Milwaukee Electronic Theses and Dissertations

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