Авторизация
Поиск по указателям
Mindich D.T. — Tuned out: Why Americans under 40 Don't Follow the News
Обсудите книгу на научном форуме
Нашли опечатку? Выделите ее мышкой и нажмите Ctrl+Enter
Название: Tuned out: Why Americans under 40 Don't Follow the News
Автор: Mindich D.T.
Аннотация: At a rate never before seen in American history, young adults are abandoning traditional news media. Tuned Out: Why Americans Under 40 Don't Follow the News examines the reasons behind this problem and its consequences for American society. Author David T. Z. Mindich speaks directly to young people to discover why some tune in while others tune out — and how America might help them tune back in.
Based on discussions with young adults from across the United States, Mindich investigates the decline in news consumption over the past four decades. In 1972, 74% of Americans in their mid-30s said they read a newspaper every day. Today, fewer than 28% do so. The average viewer age at CNN is currently about 60 years old. And while many point to the Internet as the best hope for rekindling interest in the news, only 11% of young people list the news as a major reason for logging on — entertainment, e-mail, and Instant Messenger are ranked far higher on their list. Exploring the political, journalistic, and social consequences of this decrease in political awareness, Mindich poses the question: What are the consequences of two successive generations tuning out? He asserts that as young adults abandon the kinds of news needed to make political decisions, they have unwittingly ceded power to their elders. In an engaged and intelligent way, Mindich outlines these problems and proposes real solutions.
An indispensable resource for anyone interested in media or politics, Tuned Out: Why Americans Under 40 Don't Follow the News is also ideal for undergraduate and graduate students in journalism, media, communication, political science, American studies, sociology, andeducation.
"This is a very important book. Professor Mindich has undertaken to determine the extent of the news illiteracy of an entire generation of American young people, and to speculate with authorities in broadcasting and print as to what can be done about it. This volume is a handbook for the desperately needed attempt to inspire in the young generation a curiosity that generates the news habit. Their lack of knowledge or even interest in our government bodes a critical danger to democracy as they become the nation's voting majority." — Walter Cronkite
"Mindich presents a devastating analysis of how national television news panders to young viewers with 'news-as-entertainment' options. But the book's real virtue is the way Mindich marshals statistics to support his challenge to news organizations 'to create a society in which young people feel that reading quality journalism is worthwhile.'" — Publishers Weekly
Язык:
Рубрика: Разное /
Статус предметного указателя: Готов указатель с номерами страниц
ed2k: ed2k stats
Издание: 1st edition
Год издания: 2004
Количество страниц: 192
Добавлена в каталог: 26.02.2008
Операции: Положить на полку |
Скопировать ссылку для форума | Скопировать ID
Предметный указатель
Media credibility 4 7
Melancon, Cory 75—76 75
Mercer, Rick 106
Mercy Hospital 80
Milosevic, Slobodan 56—57
Milton, John 104—105
Moyers, Bill 125
Ms. 35—37 36
MSNBC 32
MTV 4 14
MTV, Clinton appears on MTV and answers “boxers or briefs?” question 126
MTV, network's show, Jackass 33 53
MTV, network's show, Real World 53
MTV, Powell appears on MTV 56
Mumford, Lewis 9
Murrow, Edward R. 85 85
Nader, Ralph 102
Nakednews.com 14 55—56 56
National Enquirer 30 43 46
National Honor Society 86 118
National Public Radio (NPR) 30—31 38 48 53 124
NBC News 58—59
Need v. want 41—47
Negroponte, Nicholas 11
New Orleans 70 92—94
New Orleans interviews See Interviews New
New Orleans Times — Picayune 53 70 93—94
New Orleans, as a model of diversity and community 92—94
New York Herald 45 96
New York Sun 45
New York Times 7 33 37 52 62
New York Times, as a beautiful reflection of democracy 94
New York Times, as part of a large media universe 33
New York Times, independence of 46 97—98 100
New York Times, median reader age 76
New York Times, newspaper's appeal to readers' tastes 46—47 124
New York Times, read by New Orleans middle school students 68
New York Times, readers' tendency to remain on the front page 58
New York World 96—97
New Yorker 30
News ballads 43 44
News interest, by age 20—21
News interest, by gender 20
News interest, by income 20
News interest, by race 20
News knowledge 12 23—25 35—41
News magazines 30
Newspaper readership and reading habits ix 3 28—30 76
Newspaper readership and reading habits in Germany 29
Newspaper strike of 1945 63
Newsroom (Los Angeles) 60
Newsweek 30 49 50
Nick News 116
Nightline 51—52 65
Nixon, Jackie 31 53
Nixon, Richard M. 35 97 122
NOLA.com 70 74—76
Nonpartisanship 7 96—101
Nonvoters 21—23
Norris, Pippa 72 101
Nostalgia 5
Now with Bill Moyers 125
NPR See National Public Radio
O'Brien, Miles 18—19
Olbermann, Keith 125
Onion 57
Organizations See clubs and organizations
Osbourne, Ozzy 33
Paine, Thomas 110
Parent Teacher Association See PTA
Party affiliation 22—23
Pataki, George 7
Patterson, Thomas 108
PbS See Public Broadcasting Service
Peiser, Wolfram 28—29
Penny Press 45
Pentagon Papers 97
people 49 50
Personal digital assistant, programming news on 38
Pew Research Center for the People & the Press; poll revealing late night comedians as a source for news 57
Pew Research Center for the People & the Press; poll revealing news interest, by age 18
Pew Research Center for the People & the Press; poll revealing party affiliation, by age 23
Pew Research Center for the People & the Press; poll revealing percentage of Americans who understood the federal budget 11
Pew Research Center for the People & the Press; polls revealing knowledge of candidates and issues 24—25
Pew Research Center for the People & the Press; revealing declines in local news consumption 83
Pew Research Center for the People & the Press; time studies 29 32
Pindell, James 81
Plato 5
Playboy Channel 14
Political engagement 26
Political power, the news as a check on 29—30 96—98 126—27
Poutine, “Prime Minister” 106
Powell, Colin, ix 56
Power Rangers 106
Presidential elections 1—2 11 22—25
Presidential elections, accessing election news in 2000 70
Presidential elections, compared with American Idol 1—2
Presidential elections, election of 2000 102 108
Presidential elections, election of 2004 11 25 91
Presidential elections, knowledge of candidates and issues 23—24
Printing Press 43
Profits 98—103
Progressive differentiation 88—89
Project for Excellence in Journalism 123
Prolonged adolescence 65—66
PTA 8 83
Public Broadcasting Service 124
Public journalism 11 121 126
Public trust expectation See FCC
Pulitzer, Joseph 45 96 100
Putnam, Robert D. 39 65—66 87
Putnam, Robert D., civic involvement and trust 69
Putnam, Robert D., decline of social capital 7 83—84
Putnam, Robert D., Internet, news consumption, and civic involvement 71—73
Putnam, Robert D., news media consumers as generalists 31—32
Putnam, Robert D., newspaper readership 28—29
Putnam, Robert D., offers solutions to excessive media consumption 115
Putnam, Robert D., plan to rebuild social capital 121—122
Quality journalism, promoting 122—124
Quayle, Dan 23—24
Question time 121
Radio news 30
Rather, Dan 14 48 53 80.
Rather, Dan, compared with Victoria Sinclair of Nakednews.com 54—56
Rather, Dan, median viewer age of his news show 3
Rather, Dan, punched during the 1968 Democratic national convention 120
Readership Institute 113
Reagan, Ronald 29 122
Real Time with Bill Maher 125
Real World See MTV
Red Streak 113
RedEye 113—115 114 124
Rehnquist, William 40 68
Revolutionary War 109—110
Richmond, Barbara 42
Rivers, Joan 47
Rock, Chris 47—48
Roe v. Wade 37
Roosevelt, Theodore 46
Roper ASW 33
Rose, Chris 53—54 64 93
Rosen, Jay 11 90 103
Rosenfeld, Norman 26 61—62
Rosenstiel, Tom 50—51 110 122
Rosenthal, Abe 98
Roth, Richard 42
Rumsfeld, Donald 68
Rynders, Isaiah 104
Safer, Morley 95
Salant, Jonathan 82
Salon 54
Salzfass, Lizzie 35—39 36 41 65 69
Salzfass, Lizzie, discusses the “college bubble 65
Salzfass, Lizzie, protests contrasted with online communities 90
Salzfass, Lizzie, tolerance of 101—102
SAT 5 119
Scalia, Antonin 68
Schumer, Chuck 37
Schwarzenegger, Arnold 47
Schwarzenegger, Arnold; 2003 California race 82
Seacrest, Ryan 1 48
Seditious libel 96
See it Now 85 85
Seinfeld 15
Sen, Amartya 127
Senesac, Joel 63 64 69 90 118
Sensationalism 43—47
September 11, 2001 17 30 110
September 11, 2001, high news consumption on that date and in the days following 18
September 11, 2001, misconceptions surrounding the attacks 106
September 11, 2001, the need for good journalism following the changes wrought by the event 55
Shah, Dhavan 12 57 72 87
Shapiro, Andrew 116
Shawn, William 46
Shenk, David 59
Simpson, O. J. 79 122
Simpsons 65
Sinclair Broadcast Group 81
Sinclair, Victoria 55—56 56
Six Feet Under 57
Smallpox 105
So Hyang Yoon 87
soap operas 113
Social capital 39; decline of 7—12 84.
Socrates 5
Solutions 112—27; existing 112—115
Soren, Tabitha 4
Spears, Britney 47—48 53 64 124
Spears, Britney, compared with William Rehnquist 40
Spears, Britney, how newspapers use the pop star to attract readers 113
Sports, knowledge of 4
Sportscenter See ESPN
Stanton, Frank 95
Staples Center fiasco See Los Angeles Times
Stephens, Mitchell 10 14 43
Stewart, Jon 57 125
Studdard, Ruben 1—2
Suburbia 9 83
Sunstein, Cass 15 116
Super-empowered individuals 105
Supreme Court, U.S. ix 2 39 61 68.
Survivor 40 53. Burlington Vt.
Teen People 30
Telegraph 103—5
Television and social capital 8—9
Television news viewership x 3 31—32;
Television viewership 1 3 12 15 31—32
Television, technical changes in 49—51
Temptation Island 53
Thin citizenship 21—25
Thomas, Clarence 68
Thomas, Isaiah 110
Time 30 49 50
Times Mirror 100. See also Los Angeles Times
Times Mirror Center for The People & The Press 19 25 34 56—57
Tocqueville, Alexis de 13 45 88 90
Tolerance 16—17 86—87 101—102
Tonight Show 107
Tonnies, Ferdinand 145 n. 45
Torricelli, Robert 98
Trends in news consumption 19—21 26—27
Trumpet of the Swan 74
Trumpeter Swan Society 74 74
Trust 87—88; in government 4 7 69.
Tuned in young people See Alford Andrea; Kanon; Aaron; Joel
Tuning back in See Solutions
U.S. News and World Report 30 50
United Missouri Bank (UMB) 37—39 68. Kansas
Universal white manhood suffrage 21 26
Updike, John 102
Values of young people 27
Vietnam War 51 95 109
Viewership See also television viewership and television news viewership
Volunteerism 86 118
voting 2 21—23; 92
Wall Street Journal 7 48 97—98 124
Wallace, Mike 120
Walters, Barbara 48
WARs See Afghanistan War Gulf Iraq Revolutionary Vietnam
Washington Post 7 58—59 97 118
Washington, George 110
Watergate 95 122
WBAL (Baltimore) 80
WCBS (New York City) 80
Weaver, Sigourney 47
Webb, James Watson 45 96
Wells, Ida B. 16
West Wing 57
Westin, David 52
White, Byron 37
White, E. B. 27 74
Willes, Mark 100
Williams, Brian 14
Williams, Jody 90
Windsurfing 73
Woods, Tiger 53
Workplace influence on news consumption 61—62
WWL (New Orleans) 94
YAHOO! Internet Life 30
Yahoo! News 117
Zenger, John Peter 96
Реклама