Media: Key Terms

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Across
  1. 2. A type of increased increasingly popular media coverage focused on political scandals
  2. 4. Refers to topics that are usually timely, important and consequential, such as politics, international affairs and business news.
  3. 5. Journalism that is based upon sensationalism and crude exaggeration.
  4. 6. A law that protects witnesses from revealing certain information, especially in court.
  5. 8. Defined as information that is primarily entertaining or personally useful.
  6. 11. Requires broadcasters to treat political candidates equally in terms of air time.
  7. 14. The term used to describe the revolutionary business tactic of producing newspapers which sold for one cent.Wire Service: A news agency that supplies syndicated news by wire to newspapers, radio, and television stations.
  8. 15. The process whereby news media highlight, emphasize and give more prominence to a specific aspect of a news story.
  9. 16. A person who searches for and tries to expose real or alleged corruption, scandal, or other wrongdoing.
Down
  1. 1. Regulates interstate and international communications through cable, radio, television, satellite and wire
  2. 3. became concerned that the monopoly audience control of the three main networks, NBC, ABC and CBS, could misuse their broadcast licenses to set a biased public agenda. The Fairness Doctrine mandated broadcast networks devote time to contrasting views on issues of public importance.
  3. 7. Describes the tendency of the national media to focus on who is winning at any given time during a presidential campaign.
  4. 9. To distort (information) by rendering it unfaithfully or incompletely, especially in order to reflect a particular viewpoint.
  5. 10. To appear or happen gradually or to a limited degree: News filtered down to us during the day.
  6. 12. The means of communication that reach large numbers of people in a short time,
  7. 13. When news content suggests to news audiences that they ought to use specific issues as benchmarks for evaluating the performance of leaders and governments.