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Culbertson, Hugh M. – Journalism Quarterly, 1978
Reports on a study indicating that veiled attribution occurs in approximately three-fourths of news stories in both "Time" and Newsweek," and that the attribution phrases used emphasize partisan ties, suggest expertise, and tend to personalize, to add apparent scope to a story, and to be especially vague in international stories.…
Descriptors: Content Analysis, Information Sources, Journalism, Language Usage
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Blake, Joseph A.; And Others – Journalism Quarterly, 1978
Reports that most collective behavior events reported in the New York "Times" are described in terms of emotionality and anonymity of membership and are alleged to be violent and spontaneous, and that there are significant rank-order correlations between the reported presence of control agents, reported violence, and attributions of spontaneity.…
Descriptors: Group Behavior, Journalism, Language Usage, Media Research
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Woal, Michael – Central States Speech Journal, 1987
Claims all-news radio programming has appeal because it is monotonous, cyclically repetitive and expectable and that (1) the style encourages "habitual" and "automatic" listening with an economy of effort, and (2) the structure anesthetizes listeners by couching the news in familiar linguistic forms which subtly stabilize and…
Descriptors: Broadcast Industry, Communication Research, Content Analysis, Language Usage
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Fedler, Fred; And Others – Journalism Quarterly, 1979
An examination of "Time" magazine's treatment of four recent presidents indicates that "Time" continues to use the same techniques of biased reporting as were found in a 1965 study and that it continues to favor Republican presidents. (GT)
Descriptors: Bias, Content Analysis, Language Usage, Media Research