radio " wireless transmission of data using the entire frequency spectrum."
TRANSCRIPT
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Radio
"wireless transmission of data
using the entire frequency spectrum."
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Radio
• How is radio reporting different from newspaper reporting and television reporting?
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How is radio reporting different from newspaper reporting and television
reporting?
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Radio Journalism
• Condensed format: Print stories are rewritten for time constraints. Headlines --
• http://c2.libsyn.com/media/18778/dn2008-0331-1.mp3?nvb=20100929014244&nva=20100930015244&sid=df09b609448af8165de1970568452e02&l_sid=18778&l_eid=&l_mid=1710568&t=00734102fe875ec4fb25d
• Print reporters write hundreds, even thousands of words for a particular story. Few, radio stories have even a hundred words
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• Newspapers are also written hours before they are read, so the events described seem like "old news."
• Radio, on the other hand, has an intimate, "you-are-there" quality that is enhanced by the use of the present tense. Newsmakers spoke to newspaper reporters (”Obama said...."); they speak to a radio audience (”Obama SAYS....").
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Radio Reporting• The in-studio interview• Actualities: recorded segment of a newsmaker speaking, generally
lasting from 10 to 20 seconds; this is what people outside of radio journalism often call a "sound bite” (Obama talking about the economy)
• Voicers: recorded report containing only the journalist's voice (narrating events that are unfolding)
• Teaser: brief phrase spoken by the anchor immediately before playing a spot or going to traffic (or some other interruption of the newscast) to tell the listener about a story coming up later; the tease should intrigue the listener without either misrepresenting the story or revealing it entirely
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Public Radio• PUBLIC RADIO• NON-COMMERCIAL• Broadcast outlets getting their income from sources other
than advertising timeNATIONAL PUBLIC RADIO -- FCC reserved the lower portion of the FM dial for them to use. : • US is only country in world w such little public broadcasting
In most countries, like Canada, Japan & ENGLAND, public stations owned & operated by gov't.• BBC had higher ratings than commercial stations• Supported through mandatory user fees that consumer pays on each radio they own.
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This American Life• Weekly radio program on Chicago Public Radio
hosted by Ira Glass.
• Primarily a journalistic non-fiction program, it has also featured essays and field recordings
• Each week's show loosely centers on a particular theme. The theme of the show is explored in several "acts," usually two to five.
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• How does the broadcast draw the listener in? What different elements are we hearing?
• How is the experience different than watching TV or reading (besides the obvious)?
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“Number One Party School”
• http://www.thisamericanlife.org/radio-archives/episode/396/1-party-school