Deck 14: Mass Media and the Press
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Deck 14: Mass Media and the Press
1
Gladys is a food blogger for Good Housekeeping,who writes primarily about making healthy dinners that also happen to look like cakes and other desserts.What type of media is Gladys engaged in?
A) public media
B) biased media
C) analog media
D) private media
E) mass media
A) public media
B) biased media
C) analog media
D) private media
E) mass media
E
2
Which type of media organization employs the largest number of journalists who cover American politics?
A) nonprofit corporations
B) federal government entities
C) state government entities
D) local government and community broadcasters
E) for-profit corporations
A) nonprofit corporations
B) federal government entities
C) state government entities
D) local government and community broadcasters
E) for-profit corporations
E
3
Which best characterizes the development of print media from the late nineteenth century to the mid-twentieth century?
A) a transition from objective journalism to partisan journalism
B) a transition from partisan journalism to sensationalism
C) a transition from sensationalism to objective journalism
D) a transition from sensationalism to partisan journalism
E) a transition from objective journalism to sensationalism
A) a transition from objective journalism to partisan journalism
B) a transition from partisan journalism to sensationalism
C) a transition from sensationalism to objective journalism
D) a transition from sensationalism to partisan journalism
E) a transition from objective journalism to sensationalism
C
4
Which of the following best describes how the Internet and the increased availability of information have changed individual knowledge of the news?
A) Individuals are generally more knowledgeable about politics than they were in the past.
B) Individuals who are interested in politics know more, but those who are not interested know less than they used to.
C) Individuals who are interested in politics know more, but those who are not interested know about as much as they did before the Internet.
D) The large amount of information overwhelms most people, leaving even the most interested knowing less than they did before.
E) The type of knowledge known by individuals is the same regardless of what news source they use.
A) Individuals are generally more knowledgeable about politics than they were in the past.
B) Individuals who are interested in politics know more, but those who are not interested know less than they used to.
C) Individuals who are interested in politics know more, but those who are not interested know about as much as they did before the Internet.
D) The large amount of information overwhelms most people, leaving even the most interested knowing less than they did before.
E) The type of knowledge known by individuals is the same regardless of what news source they use.
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5
Shows like The Daily Show and The Colbert Report focus primarily on offering a satirical presentation of real world news.What term best identifies the type of programming these two shows engage in?
A) information
B) sensationalism
C) infotainment
D) podcasting
E) political entertainment
A) information
B) sensationalism
C) infotainment
D) podcasting
E) political entertainment
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6
The decision of news directors to focus on sports and gossip news rather than international news speaks to what guiding factor of the media?
A) the profit motive
B) the unbiased motive
C) the reporting motive
D) the violence motive
E) the news motive
A) the profit motive
B) the unbiased motive
C) the reporting motive
D) the violence motive
E) the news motive
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7
In a democracy,the two essential functions of a free press are providing citizens with information about the world and ____________________.
A) allowing candidates and parties to make a case for why they should be in office
B) promoting interpersonal friendships
C) disseminating celebrity gossip
D) reporting the scores of sporting events
E) broadcasting infomercials
A) allowing candidates and parties to make a case for why they should be in office
B) promoting interpersonal friendships
C) disseminating celebrity gossip
D) reporting the scores of sporting events
E) broadcasting infomercials
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8
Which term refers to the press's role in monitoring and evaluating public officials and exposing wrongdoing and incompetence?
A) burglar alarm
B) tripwire
C) land mine
D) watchdog
E) binoculars
A) burglar alarm
B) tripwire
C) land mine
D) watchdog
E) binoculars
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9
A news producer for a major network newscast is trying to determine whether to cover a celebrity's recent drug arrest,or violence in a country that few Americans know about.According to the profit motive,which story will be chosen,and why?
A) the celebrity story, because it will attract a larger audience
B) the celebrity story, because it is more newsworthy for American audiences
C) the international story, because it is more newsworthy for American audiences
D) the international story, because it will attract a larger audience
E) neither; that will leave more time for advertising
A) the celebrity story, because it will attract a larger audience
B) the celebrity story, because it is more newsworthy for American audiences
C) the international story, because it is more newsworthy for American audiences
D) the international story, because it will attract a larger audience
E) neither; that will leave more time for advertising
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10
Which of the following events helped shift the media toward a more objective standard of news reporting?
A) the sinking of the USS Maine in 1898, which was used by the media to start the Spanish-American War
B) the end of World War II
C) changes in technology, such as the rise of newspaper wire services, radio, and television
D) the folding of the DuMont network
E) the rise of independently owned newspapers
A) the sinking of the USS Maine in 1898, which was used by the media to start the Spanish-American War
B) the end of World War II
C) changes in technology, such as the rise of newspaper wire services, radio, and television
D) the folding of the DuMont network
E) the rise of independently owned newspapers
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11
In the Marvel Comics universe,The Daily Bugle newspaper consistently reports about Spider-Man's actions as being menacing toward society,in an attempt to turn the public against the Wall Crawler.What type of media best describes the actions of The Daily Bugle?
A) partisan
B) objective
C) infotainment
D) entertainment
E) sensationalist
A) partisan
B) objective
C) infotainment
D) entertainment
E) sensationalist
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12
Which are media intended to convey messages to large,public audiences,like blogs,mass email and tweets?
A) public media
B) electronic media
C) analog media
D) private media
E) mass media
A) public media
B) electronic media
C) analog media
D) private media
E) mass media
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13
A news report explaining changes to the latest federal budget would fall under which of the media's roles in a free society?
A) evaluation of government officials
B) interpretation of information
C) solver of collective action problems
D) presenter of infotainment
E) crafter of bias
A) evaluation of government officials
B) interpretation of information
C) solver of collective action problems
D) presenter of infotainment
E) crafter of bias
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14
Which federal regulation required the holders of broadcast licenses to present information on important issues in a way that was honest,equitable,and balanced?
A) Fairness Doctrine
B) Equal Time Rule
C) Telecommunications Act
D) Electronic Media Act
E) Free Press Principle
A) Fairness Doctrine
B) Equal Time Rule
C) Telecommunications Act
D) Electronic Media Act
E) Free Press Principle
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15
Which technological innovation changed news by allowing messages to be more tailored and narrow to specific groups?
A) television
B) radio
C) Internet
D) cable TV
E) the printing press
A) television
B) radio
C) Internet
D) cable TV
E) the printing press
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16
Which are media intended to convey interpersonal communications that are not intended for a wider audience?
A) public media
B) electronic media
C) analog media
D) private media
E) mass media
A) public media
B) electronic media
C) analog media
D) private media
E) mass media
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17
You are in a Google Hangout with your friends Rick,Shane,and Lori,and you discuss a recent Supreme Court ruling on campaign finance reform.What sort of media are you and your friends currently using?
A) public media
B) biased media
C) analog media
D) private media
E) mass media
A) public media
B) biased media
C) analog media
D) private media
E) mass media
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18
Government licensing of radio frequencies solves a/an ____________________ among radio and television stations by preventing companies from using signals that interfere with one another's broadcasts.
A) coordination problem
B) Prisoner's Dilemma
C) collective-action problem
D) principal-agent problem
E) unstable coalition
A) coordination problem
B) Prisoner's Dilemma
C) collective-action problem
D) principal-agent problem
E) unstable coalition
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19
Which of the following best describes the current state of media in the United States?
A) The media is expansive, and primarily objective in its nature.
B) The media is expansive, and primarily ideological in nature.
C) The media is a mix of objective and ideological sources of all types.
D) The political parties have primary control of media in the United States.
E) Media is locally owned and controlled, with little national focus.
A) The media is expansive, and primarily objective in its nature.
B) The media is expansive, and primarily ideological in nature.
C) The media is a mix of objective and ideological sources of all types.
D) The political parties have primary control of media in the United States.
E) Media is locally owned and controlled, with little national focus.
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20
In the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries,mass media primarily took the form of a ____________________.
A) partisan press operating through print outlets
B) commercial press operating through print outlets
C) partisan press operating through radio
D) commercial press operating through radio
E) partisan press operating through electronic media
A) partisan press operating through print outlets
B) commercial press operating through print outlets
C) partisan press operating through radio
D) commercial press operating through radio
E) partisan press operating through electronic media
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21
In which country is the majority of major broadcast media privately owned by a prominent national politician?
A) Iran
B) China
C) United Kingdom
D) United States
E) Italy
A) Iran
B) China
C) United Kingdom
D) United States
E) Italy
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22
Which of the following best describes attitudes in the United States toward government regulation of private media?
A) In the United States, private media cannot be monitored by the federal government due to the Assange Act of 2011.
B) The United States is generally more open to monitoring of private media than other democratic countries.
C) The United States is generally less open to monitoring of private media than other democratic countries.
D) In the United States, private media is regulated just as much as public media.
E) The United States does not have the technological capacity to monitor private media.
A) In the United States, private media cannot be monitored by the federal government due to the Assange Act of 2011.
B) The United States is generally more open to monitoring of private media than other democratic countries.
C) The United States is generally less open to monitoring of private media than other democratic countries.
D) In the United States, private media is regulated just as much as public media.
E) The United States does not have the technological capacity to monitor private media.
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23
A news organization that supports an incumbent president would exhibit ______________ by failing to report any news about the economy during a recession.
A) gatekeeping bias
B) elite bias
C) ideological bias
D) coverage bias
E) statement bias
A) gatekeeping bias
B) elite bias
C) ideological bias
D) coverage bias
E) statement bias
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24
In which country is the press principally state-owned but operated independently of the government?
A) Iran
B) China
C) United Kingdom
D) United States
E) Italy
A) Iran
B) China
C) United Kingdom
D) United States
E) Italy
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25
Which is most consistent with the agenda hypothesis?
A) A generally conservative individual watches a liberal cable news outlet to see "what the other side is up to."
B) An investor who is only mildly interested in political news that does not influence her business interests primarily visits financial news Web sites that principally cover economic and business news.
C) A liberal individual watches a liberal cable news outlet to see stories that match her ideological predispositions.
D) A generally conservative person with little interest in politics happens to be exposed to some political news stories while he watches a local news broadcast to hear the scores of local sporting events and the weather report.
E) A person intentionally chooses to avoid political news coverage on television in general because she finds the style of modern broadcast journalism distasteful.
A) A generally conservative individual watches a liberal cable news outlet to see "what the other side is up to."
B) An investor who is only mildly interested in political news that does not influence her business interests primarily visits financial news Web sites that principally cover economic and business news.
C) A liberal individual watches a liberal cable news outlet to see stories that match her ideological predispositions.
D) A generally conservative person with little interest in politics happens to be exposed to some political news stories while he watches a local news broadcast to hear the scores of local sporting events and the weather report.
E) A person intentionally chooses to avoid political news coverage on television in general because she finds the style of modern broadcast journalism distasteful.
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26
Which hypothesis predicts that people will choose to consume news from media outlets that share their ideological predispositions?
A) partisan hypothesis
B) convergence hypothesis
C) agenda hypothesis
D) efficacy hypothesis
E) engagement hypothesis
A) partisan hypothesis
B) convergence hypothesis
C) agenda hypothesis
D) efficacy hypothesis
E) engagement hypothesis
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27
Which term refers to a media organization's systematic tendency to emphasize certain types of stories or aspects of stories?
A) gatekeeping bias
B) elite bias
C) ideological bias
D) coverage bias
E) statement bias
A) gatekeeping bias
B) elite bias
C) ideological bias
D) coverage bias
E) statement bias
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28
According to studies,what type of individuals are most swayed and persuaded by media information?
A) the most well-informed individuals
B) people who watch infotainment shows like The Daily Show
C) people who are moderately informed about politics
D) people who are not at all informed about politics
E) no one is swayed by media information
A) the most well-informed individuals
B) people who watch infotainment shows like The Daily Show
C) people who are moderately informed about politics
D) people who are not at all informed about politics
E) no one is swayed by media information
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29
Which is most consistent with the partisan hypothesis?
A) A generally conservative individual watches a liberal cable news outlet to see "what the other side is up to."
B) An investor who is only mildly interested in political news that does not influence her business interests primarily visits financial news Web sites that principally cover economic and business news.
C) A liberal individual watches a liberal cable news outlet to see stories that match her ideological predispositions.
D) A generally conservative person with little interest in politics happens to be exposed to some political news stories while he watches a local news broadcast to hear the scores of local sporting events and the weather report.
E) A person intentionally chooses to avoid political news coverage on television in general because she finds the style of modern broadcast journalism distasteful.
A) A generally conservative individual watches a liberal cable news outlet to see "what the other side is up to."
B) An investor who is only mildly interested in political news that does not influence her business interests primarily visits financial news Web sites that principally cover economic and business news.
C) A liberal individual watches a liberal cable news outlet to see stories that match her ideological predispositions.
D) A generally conservative person with little interest in politics happens to be exposed to some political news stories while he watches a local news broadcast to hear the scores of local sporting events and the weather report.
E) A person intentionally chooses to avoid political news coverage on television in general because she finds the style of modern broadcast journalism distasteful.
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30
Which is a federal law,passed in 1996,that substantially lowered barriers to new firms entering the media marketplace?
A) Fairness Doctrine
B) Equal Time Rule
C) Telecommunications Act
D) Electronic Media Act
E) Free Press Principle
A) Fairness Doctrine
B) Equal Time Rule
C) Telecommunications Act
D) Electronic Media Act
E) Free Press Principle
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31
Media bias ____________________.
A) is only ideological in nature
B) is generally considered to be unacceptable at all levels of media
C) is sometimes unavoidable because of the nature of the news being presented
D) is not considered a major problem by American politicians
E) is a relatively new concept in American media, and has only existed since the rise of cable news
A) is only ideological in nature
B) is generally considered to be unacceptable at all levels of media
C) is sometimes unavoidable because of the nature of the news being presented
D) is not considered a major problem by American politicians
E) is a relatively new concept in American media, and has only existed since the rise of cable news
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32
Which hypothesis predicts that people will choose to consume news from media outlets based on their personal interests and the issue areas that various outlets emphasize?
A) partisan hypothesis
B) convergence hypothesis
C) agenda hypothesis
D) efficacy hypothesis
E) engagement hypothesis
A) partisan hypothesis
B) convergence hypothesis
C) agenda hypothesis
D) efficacy hypothesis
E) engagement hypothesis
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33
A news organization critical of an incumbent president would exhibit ____________________ by reliably reporting the number of American casualties in a foreign conflict without describing the number of enemy casualties or military objectives achieved in combat.
A) gatekeeping bias
B) elite bias
C) ideological bias
D) coverage bias
E) statement bias
A) gatekeeping bias
B) elite bias
C) ideological bias
D) coverage bias
E) statement bias
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34
Which is most consistent with the engagement hypothesis?
A) A generally conservative individual watches a liberal cable news outlet to see "what the other side is up to."
B) An investor who is only mildly interested in political news that does not influence her business interests primarily visits financial news Web sites that principally cover economic and business news.
C) A liberal individual watches a liberal cable news outlet to see stories that match her ideological predispositions.
D) A generally conservative person with little interest in politics happens to be exposed to some political news stories while he watches a local news broadcast to hear the scores of local sporting events and the weather report.
E) A person intentionally chooses to avoid political news coverage on television in general because she finds the style of modern broadcast journalism distasteful.
A) A generally conservative individual watches a liberal cable news outlet to see "what the other side is up to."
B) An investor who is only mildly interested in political news that does not influence her business interests primarily visits financial news Web sites that principally cover economic and business news.
C) A liberal individual watches a liberal cable news outlet to see stories that match her ideological predispositions.
D) A generally conservative person with little interest in politics happens to be exposed to some political news stories while he watches a local news broadcast to hear the scores of local sporting events and the weather report.
E) A person intentionally chooses to avoid political news coverage on television in general because she finds the style of modern broadcast journalism distasteful.
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35
Which term refers to a media's systematic tendency to interject editorial content into the coverage of issues or events?
A) gatekeeping bias
B) elite bias
C) ideological bias
D) coverage bias
E) statement bias
A) gatekeeping bias
B) elite bias
C) ideological bias
D) coverage bias
E) statement bias
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36
Which hypothesis predicts that people will choose to consume news from media outlets that provide the level of news coverage,compared to other content,which they most prefer?
A) partisan hypothesis
B) convergence hypothesis
C) agenda hypothesis
D) efficacy hypothesis
E) engagement hypothesis
A) partisan hypothesis
B) convergence hypothesis
C) agenda hypothesis
D) efficacy hypothesis
E) engagement hypothesis
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37
A news organization that regularly includes criticisms of a president's policies in news coverage of the economy exhibits ____________________.
A) gatekeeping bias
B) elite bias
C) ideological bias
D) coverage bias
E) statement bias
A) gatekeeping bias
B) elite bias
C) ideological bias
D) coverage bias
E) statement bias
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38
Which federal regulation required broadcasters to give equal time to competing candidates for public office?
A) Fairness Doctrine
B) Equal Time Rule
C) Telecommunications Act
D) Electronic Media Act
E) Free Press Principle
A) Fairness Doctrine
B) Equal Time Rule
C) Telecommunications Act
D) Electronic Media Act
E) Free Press Principle
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39
According to studies on learning and the media,where do people learn most of their news about current events?
A) friends and family
B) mass media
C) coworkers
D) direct observation
E) osmosis
A) friends and family
B) mass media
C) coworkers
D) direct observation
E) osmosis
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40
Which term refers to a media organization's systematic tendency not to report a specific type of story?
A) gatekeeping bias
B) elite bias
C) ideological bias
D) coverage bias
E) statement bias
A) gatekeeping bias
B) elite bias
C) ideological bias
D) coverage bias
E) statement bias
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41
The media tactic that involves using the psychological process of shaping people's perceptions of a particular issue,figure,or policy is also known as ____________________.
A) framing
B) priming
C) mixing strategies
D) logrolling
E) pluralism
A) framing
B) priming
C) mixing strategies
D) logrolling
E) pluralism
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42
Which of the following would be an example of framing,in the context of the political media?
A) Dr. Richard Kimble is accused of a crime he did not commit, and goes on the run to prove his innocence.
B) A news telecast focuses a story on a member of Congress who is running for office for a 10th term, putting primary focus on the member's advanced age as a way to characterize the member as out of touch.
C) A news director decides to present a story on that evening's telecast about a squirrel on a mini Jet-Ski rather than about conflict in the Middle East.
D) A sports reporter in Boston ends his telecast by yelling "Go Sox!"
E) A reporter takes a story about a war-torn country and focuses attention on the plight of refugees in the country rather than the parties at war.
A) Dr. Richard Kimble is accused of a crime he did not commit, and goes on the run to prove his innocence.
B) A news telecast focuses a story on a member of Congress who is running for office for a 10th term, putting primary focus on the member's advanced age as a way to characterize the member as out of touch.
C) A news director decides to present a story on that evening's telecast about a squirrel on a mini Jet-Ski rather than about conflict in the Middle East.
D) A sports reporter in Boston ends his telecast by yelling "Go Sox!"
E) A reporter takes a story about a war-torn country and focuses attention on the plight of refugees in the country rather than the parties at war.
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43
In 1992,the media continually discussed and mentioned Vice President Dan Quayle's inability to spell the word "potato" (which he spelled in a New Jersey classroom "potatoe"),to highlight a mistake and influence the criteria that individuals use to judge politicians (namely to make Quayle seem incompetent).What technique best describes the media's focus on Quayle here?
A) framing
B) priming
C) mixing strategies
D) logrolling
E) pluralism
A) framing
B) priming
C) mixing strategies
D) logrolling
E) pluralism
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44
What are the primary functions of the press in a democracy? How does the press fulfill these duties in the United States? How well does the modern American media serve these public functions? Is the modern media environment an improvement over previous periods in the historical development of mass media in the United States?
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45
Describe the historical development of mass political media in the United States from the eighteenth century to today.Which major technological developments shifted the ways that Americans sent and received political news? How have these developments influenced American politics?
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46
In what ways might media organizations be thought of as principals in principal-agent relationships with other entities? In what ways might media organizations assume the role of an agent? How does the duality of the media's role in American politics,serving as both principal in some capacities and agent in others,shape the type of political information that Americans receive?
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47
How would we know if an ostensibly objective media outlet is politically biased? What are three types of political bias that might be evident in political news coverage? Is political bias necessarily a liberal or conservative bias? What evidence is there of bias in major American media?
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48
Identify and describe three hypotheses that explain why people choose particular outlets for political news.What assumptions about people's interest in politics or cognitive processes motivate these theories? What evidence supports or contradicts the predictions of these theories?
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49
Why does the First Amendment permit the federal government to regulate the content of broadcast media in ways that would be impermissible if applied to print media? What are some ways that the federal government regulates or has regulated the content of broadcast media? What are the goals of these regulations? Have the regulations had their intended effects?
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50
What is the term for the media tactic that involves focusing on a specific aspect of a story over other aspects?
A) framing
B) priming
C) mixing strategies
D) logrolling
E) pluralism
A) framing
B) priming
C) mixing strategies
D) logrolling
E) pluralism
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51
Which of the following would be an example of priming,in regards to the political media?
A) A group of benevolent robots comes to Earth to stop other robots from destroying the planet.
B) A news telecast focuses a story on a member of Congress who is running for office for a 10th term, putting primary focus on the member's advanced age as a way to characterize the member as out of touch.
C) A news director decides to present a story on that evening's telecast about a squirrel on a mini Jet-Ski rather than about conflict in the Middle East.
D) A sports reporter in Boston ends his telecast by yelling "Go Sox!"
E) A reporter takes a story about a war-torn country and focuses attention on the plight of refugees in the country rather than the parties at war.
A) A group of benevolent robots comes to Earth to stop other robots from destroying the planet.
B) A news telecast focuses a story on a member of Congress who is running for office for a 10th term, putting primary focus on the member's advanced age as a way to characterize the member as out of touch.
C) A news director decides to present a story on that evening's telecast about a squirrel on a mini Jet-Ski rather than about conflict in the Middle East.
D) A sports reporter in Boston ends his telecast by yelling "Go Sox!"
E) A reporter takes a story about a war-torn country and focuses attention on the plight of refugees in the country rather than the parties at war.
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52
The Internet has drastically changed how individuals get information,as well as the messages they receive.How has the Internet and new media in general changed American politics? In particular,how have elections and campaigns been affected?
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