Chapter 10 Activity
Across
- 4. the phenomenon of large corporations buying smaller ones so that there are fewer and fewer companies’ products available
- 6. the practice of aiming media content at specific segments of the public
- 7. a hybrid of the words information and entertainment; news shows that combine entertainment and news
- 12. the process by which the media set a context that helps people understand important events and matters of shared interest
- 14. the requirement that stations holding broadcast licenses present controversial issues of public importance and do so in a manner that was honest, fair, and balanced
- 15. the breaking down of the media according to the specific audiences they target
- 18. tools used to store and deliver information or data
- 19. newspapers that sold for a penny in the 1830s
- 20. the public issues that most demand the attention of government officials
Down
- 1. an irresponsible, sensationalist approach to news reporting, so named after the yellow ink used in the “Yellow Kid” cartoons in the New York World
- 2. a format featuring conversations and interviews about topics of interest, along with call-ins from listeners
- 3. criticism and exposés of corruption in government and industry by journalists at the turn of the 20th century
- 5. President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s radio addresses to the country
- 8. the quality of looking good on TV
- 9. a letter in which a reader responds to a story in a newspaper, knowing that the letter might be published in that paper
- 10. the practice of limiting access to a website unless users pay a fee or purchase
- 11. bringing certain policies on issues to the public agenda through media coverage
- 13. sources of information—including Internet websites, blogs, social networking sites such a Facebook and Twitter, photo- and video-sharing platforms such as Instagram and YouTube, and apps—and the cellular and satellite technologies that facilitate their use
- 16. the merging of various forms of media, including newspapers, television stations,radio networks, and blogs, under one corporate roof and one set of business editorial leaders
- 17. the practice of gathering and reporting events