Catch, Engage, Retain: Audience-Oriented Journalistic Role Performance in Canada
被引:1
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作者:
Blanchett, Nicole
论文数: 0引用数: 0
h-index: 0
机构:
Toronto Metropolitan Univ, Sch Journalism, Creat Sch, Toronto, ON, CanadaToronto Metropolitan Univ, Sch Journalism, Creat Sch, Toronto, ON, Canada
Blanchett, Nicole
[1
]
Brin, Colette
论文数: 0引用数: 0
h-index: 0
机构:
Univ Laval, Dept informat & Commun, Quebec City, PQ, CanadaToronto Metropolitan Univ, Sch Journalism, Creat Sch, Toronto, ON, Canada
Brin, Colette
[2
]
Duncan, Stuart
论文数: 0引用数: 0
h-index: 0
机构:
Toronto Metropolitan Univ, Creat Sch, Sch Media & Design, Toronto, ON, CanadaToronto Metropolitan Univ, Sch Journalism, Creat Sch, Toronto, ON, Canada
Duncan, Stuart
[3
]
机构:
[1] Toronto Metropolitan Univ, Sch Journalism, Creat Sch, Toronto, ON, Canada
Journalistic role performance;
audience data;
journalism;
social media;
journalists;
infotainment;
metrics;
analytics;
NEWS;
ANALYTICS;
CULTURES;
METRICS;
WEB;
D O I:
10.1080/17512786.2024.2310712
中图分类号:
G2 [信息与知识传播];
学科分类号:
05 ;
0503 ;
摘要:
To understand audience-oriented journalistic role performance, one must understand how journalists conceptualize and cater to their audience. Giving the audience what it wants is a complex endeavor, with varying goals and hybridized end results, in newsrooms with fewer resources serving increasingly polarized audiences. Through a triangulation of data-content analysis at the subdimension level to examine the range and hybridity of audience-oriented journalistic product presenting the civic, service and infotainment roles; a survey to identify journalists' attitudes toward the use of audience data and social media in their work; and interviews with journalists that revealed how their journalistic practice and audience perceptions were impacted by quantitative (metrics and analytics) and qualitative data (comments/social media interactions)-this research fills a gap in understanding about the connection between journalists, their audiences, and audience data when it comes to journalistic role performance. Findings show that in Canada the infotainment role is a significant part of reporting, but entertaining often comes with a goal of educating, as does service journalism. There are no "bad" journalistic roles, but there are a lot of journalists trying to figure out which ones might best catch, engage, and retain an ever-shrinking news audience.