- The document discusses the history of journalism in America from the earliest newspapers in the late 1600s/early 1700s which contained little news and were subject to censorship, to the development of partisan newspapers in the 1700s and the establishment of freedom of the press.
- It then covers the rise of the penny press in the 1830s which sold newspapers on the street for a penny and included news stories, the growth of women journalists in the 1840s-50s, and the impact of the telegraph in the 1860s which accelerated news reporting.
- Developments like yellow journalism in the late 1800s, muckraking journalism which investigated corruption, and the rise of radio and television news in the
2. Americas First Newspapers Composed of letters, essays, borrowed materials Little, if any news Publick Occurrences 1690, Benjamin Harris One issue British colonial authorities didnt dig what he published
3. Americas First Newspapers 1704 Boston News-Letter first published continuously John Campbell published it by authority
4. Freedom of the Press If attempted to criticize government guilty of SEDITION Sedition = stirring of rebellion, criticizing government The greater the truth, the greater the libel. In early 1700s, truth was not a defense against libel. Libel written defamation of character person, institution, belief
5. Freedom of the Press N.Y. Weekly Journal John Peter Zenger (publisher) article criticized Gov. William Cosby (1735) In jail for seditious libel charge
6. Freedom of the Press Case was hopeless if he printed attacks on government, he was guilty of libel, even if his statements were true . . . Andrew Hamilton, attorney Basically stated that through our countrys freedom, we have secured ourselves the right to truth the liberty of both expressing and opposing power
7. Freedom of the Press Were it left to me to decide whether we should have a government without newspapers or newspapers without a government, I should not hesitate to prefer the latter. - Thomas Jefferson
8. Partisan Press Zengers trial began freedom rallies in the colonies Newspapers began to align with political parties continued for 100 years or so Whig/Tory paper Freedom of press established in First Amendment rather than Constitution
9. The Penny Press 1833 Benjamin Day New York Sun Full of glorious, real news! (police beat, tragedies, natural disasters, minimized the opinions) Sold for a penny on street sales, not subscriptions Became very popular Advertising became prominent Others New York Morning Herald (James Gordon Bennet), New York Tribune (Horace Greely)
10. Women in early American Journalism Cornelia Walter editor of the Boston Transcript in 1840s Jane Grey Swisshelm first woman to cover Congress (1850 . . . for the Tribune)
11. The Penny Press New York Times (1851-present) Best pro journalists Set standard for fairness and accuracy Standard has been widely imitated but rarely equaled
12. Telegraph 1844 Impact on journalism felt during civil war (1860s) Reporters at sites transmitted stories by telegraph Telegraph sped up reporting of news News gathering services (AP, UPI) sprang up still called wire services
13. Yellow Journalism Late 19th century low point in journalism Unethical, irresponsible journalism Hoaxes, altered photos, screaming headlines, promotion of newspapers themselves Much like todays National Enquirer, Sun, World Weekly News , Globe magazine, The Onion, etc. William Randolph Hearst (New York Journal), Joseph Pulitzer (New York World)
14. Yellow Journalism Newspapers attracted huge audiences These two papers competed fiercely Nellie Bly (Elizabeth Cockrane) made the news herself; pretended to be mentally ill committed to Blackwell Island Asylum
15. Muckraking Opposite of yellow journalism journalists on crusade Papers crusaded for child labor laws, promoted hospitals, collected money for needy Battled corruption in all its forms Pure Food and Drug act of 1906 result of public scrutiny of meat packing industry
16. Radio and TV Radio newscasts brought live news to listeners TV brought live, moving pictures to viewers Newspapers took less of a breaking news role TV had big impact on viewers during Vietnam led to increased instances of protest FCC jurisdiction over airwaves NO Censorship power
17. Journalism Today General decline in readership 24% of young people surveyed said they dont read newspapers Good journalists need to keep up with current news! To stay competitive, newspapers have increased their online presence as their print presence has decreased
18. Final Thoughts First Amendment right the press is the only constitutionally protected industry in the country. This implies responsibility, even for high school journalists! Because of this right, journalists have an obligation to perform for the benefit of society accurate, responsible reporting!!!