Across
- 2. who created this theory
- 3. news media that try to reach broad, diverse audiences
- 5. clusters of people who demand center stage for their one overriding concern; pressure groups
- 8. where does this theory lie on the objective and interpretive scale
- 10. list of issues most salient to a single person at a given time
- 11. over time the media agenda shapes the public agenda
- 12. new articles that are intentionally and verifiably false and could mislead readers
- 13. news media that try to appeal to specific interest communities
- 14. an unconditional love for others because they were created in the image of God
- 15. the social process by which we meld agendas from various sources to create pictures of the world that fit our experiences and preferences
- 16. computer program that decides which materials appears in search engines, social media feeds, and elsewhere on the internet
- 17. a drive to understand whats going on in the world, often fueled by relevance and uncertainty
Down
- 1. list of issues emphasized by the news media at a given time
- 4. what type of tradition does this theory follow
- 6. editors and other arbiters of culture who determine what will appear in the mass media
- 7. one news source influences the agenda of another
- 9. a moral responsibility to promote community, mutuality, and persons-in-relation who live simultaneously for others and for themselves
