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Journalist
 

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Journalist




A journalist is a person who practises Journalism , the gathering and dissemination of information about current events, trends, issues and people.

Reporter s are one type of journalist. They create reports as a profession for broadcast or publication in Mass Media such as Newspaper s, Television , Radio , Magazine s, Documentary Film , and the Internet . Reporters find the sources for their work, their reports can be either spoken or written, and they are generally expected to report in the most Objective and Unbias ed way to serve the public good.

Depending on the context, the term ''journalist'' also includes various types of Editor s and visual journalists, such as Photographer s, Graphic Artist s, and Page Designers .


ORIGIN AND SCOPE OF THE TERM


In the early 19th Century , journalist simply meant someone who wrote for journals, such as Charles Dickens in his early career. In the past century it has come to mean a writer for newspapers and magazines as well.

Many people consider ''journalist'' interchangeable with ''reporter'', a person who gathers information and creates a written report, or story. However, this overlooks many other types of journalists, including columnists, leader writers, Photographers , editorial designers, and sub-editors (British) or Copy Editor s (American). The only major distinction is that designers, writers and art directors who work exclusively on advertising material - that is, material in which the content is shaped by the person buying the ad, rather than the publication - are not considered journalists.

Regardless of medium, the term ''journalist'' carries a connotation or expectation of professionalism in reporting, with consideration for truth and Ethics although in some areas, such as the downmarket, scandal-led Tabloid s, the standards are deliberately negated.


18TH-CENTURY JOURNALISTS


  • Joseph Addison - wrote many of the finest pieces in Steele's publications ( 1713 - 1714 ), ''The Monitor'' ( 1714 ), ''The Manufacturer'' (1719-21), ''The Commentator'' ( 1720 ) and ''The Director'' ( 1720 - 1721)

  • Daniel Defoe - as editor of the ''Review'', he can claim to have invented many of the most popular formats, including the eye-witness report, the travel piece and the strongly opinionated column. Defoe's ''Review'' began publication on February 19 , 1704 , and lasted until June 11, 1713 . He was also involved in several other periodicals, including ''The Master Mercury'' (1704), ''Mercator: or, Commerce Retrieved''

  • Richard Steele - founded and edited London-based periodicals including ''The Guardian'' and ''The Spectator'' in the early 1700s .



19TH-CENTURY JOURNALISTS




20TH-CENTURY PRINT JOURNALISTS




20TH-CENTURY BROADCAST JOURNALISTS




INTERNET-ONLY JOURNALISTS


In recent years the numbers of journalists publishing only on the Internet, as opposed to print or broadcast journalists whose work also appears online, has grown enormously. Some of the best-known include:

  • Matt Drudge - The first famous Internet-only journalist for his work around scandals of the Clinton administration, in the United States.

  • Richard Menta - Editor at MP3 Newswire and MP3.com



JOURNALISTS WRITING FICTION


There are many examples of journalists who made their mark writing fiction or other non-journalism, including:



MODERN JOURNALISTS


The explosion of modern media, including the creation of Internet-based news sources and the possibility that Citizen Journalism will greatly expand the field, has made it all but impossible to identify which journalists are notable, in the sense that they could be identified in the past. The global justice protests in Seattle (1999) gave rise to the independent media movement, exemplified by the Indymedia Media Center network, a collective of independent media organizations and hundreds of journalists offering grassroots, non-corporate coverage. Indymedia is a democratic media outlet for the creation of radical, accurate, and passionate tellings of truth.


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