Friday, November 30, 2007

Sad sate of media affairs

The local media providers in the Twin Cities area were at Hamline University on Tuesday for a symposium form, regarding political news coverage of last year's election and the 2008 Presidential election, United States. Yet, I find it interesting that none of the journalists at the forum couldn't admit or proclaim that the entire news media profession has an enormous bias at the benefit of media consolidation owners, and that news journalism itself had turned away from its orthodox roots of true objective journalism and more in favor of "infotainment" news content. To say the least, almost all of young people are using the Internet as a source of real news than either TV or Radio combined; and newspapers however are lacking in circulation because of the growth of Internet access and the vast resources of news services that the paper company itself couldn't get a hold of in the context of reliable sources.

Tuesday, November 13, 2007

"Mapping the blogosphere"

I've decided to post the first critique scholarly articles for media communications: "Mapping the blogosphere." The publication talks about how online blogs take in part of the democratic process by political activists in a bipolar political system in the United States; they are not really citizen journalism standards, but rather opinions that are express by various people. The original essay review was published on October 5th for this media communications class at Hamline.; it is over 5-7 pages long under a outline formant.