Article Results (Showing 1 - 10 of 76) RSS Alert
-
So old it seems new: "60 Minutes" continues to focus on serious journalismand it's thriving
Imagine a television news program with no flashy graphics and no theme music. A program whose full-time correspondents are all white and, with one...
American Journalism Review, 08/01/09 by Deborah Potter · More from publication -
Extreme makeover: local newscasts experiment with new looks and formats in an effort to draw viewers
Turn on a local television newscast almost anywhere in the country and you'll see pretty much the same thing: a male-female anchor team delivering...
American Journalism Review, 06/01/09 by Deborah Potter · More from publication -
Endangered I-Teams: local TV stations are unwisely jettisoning their investigative units
The decision didn't come as a total shock, but the timing was ironic. One day after accepting a prestigious Alfred. I. duPont-Columbia University...
American Journalism Review, 04/01/09 by Deborah Potter · More from publication -
Collaborate or die? Local TV stations are joining forces to cover the news
It's grim out there. So many people have lost their jobs in television newsrooms that it's a wonder any news gets on the air. Everyone's working...
American Journalism Review, 02/01/09 by Deborah Potter · More from publication -
Business blather: the financial meltdown was a missed opportunity for cable news
Whiplash or vertigo--call it what you like. It's the feeling you get from watching cable news try to cover complicated stories. TV has always...
American Journalism Review, 12/01/08 by Deborah Potter · More from publication -
What would Murrow do? Half a century after he castigated the broadcast industry, problems persist
A lot has changed in the 50 years since Edward R. Murrow made his now-famous speech challenging television news to live up to its potential. What's...
American Journalism Review, 10/01/08 by Deborah Potter · More from publication -
Neurocognitive Correlates of Response to Treatment in Late-Life Depression
Depression is often associated with neurocognitive deficits in older adults, particularly in the domains of information processing speed, episodic...
American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry, The, 09/01/08 by Story, Tyler J; Potter, Guy G; Attix, Deborah K; Welsh-Bohmer, Kathleen A; Steffens, David C · More from publication -
On the go: what's the outlook for mobile TV news?
If local television news is going to survive, it will have to get out of the living room. And the den. And the kitchen. Having watched its audience...
American Journalism Review, 08/01/08 by Deborah Potter · More from publication -
Star-crossed newsrooms: a flurry of big-name layoffs marks the reinvention of the local TV news business
Anyone who's been in the television news business for a decade or more has seen it before. A tough economy always means cutbacks, so it wasn't a...
American Journalism Review, 06/01/08 by Deborah Potter · More from publication -
Why journalism matters: at a time of gloom and doom in the business, the new Newseum reinforces its importance
Cramped and hard to find: That's my memory of the Freedom Forum's old Newseum in Roselyn, Virginia, which closed more than six years ago. Its...
American Journalism Review, 04/01/08 by Deborah Potter · More from publication


