COVID-19 news reporting and engaging in the age of social media: Comparing Xinhua News Agency and The Paper

被引:11
|
作者
Chen, Zenan [1 ]
Xu, Xiaoge [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Nottingham Ningbo China, Inst Mobile Studies, Ningbo 315100, Peoples R China
关键词
COVID-19; market-oriented; news frames; news media; party-controlled; social media; story tone; user engagement; TELEVISION-NEWS; COVERAGE; CHINA; NEWSPAPER; SARS; RESPONSIBILITY; HEALTH; PRESS; WOMEN; TONE;
D O I
10.1177/20594364211017364
中图分类号
G2 [信息与知识传播];
学科分类号
05 ; 0503 ;
摘要
"To follow and to be followed" has become the new normal in news communication in the age of social media. News audience follow news via social media while they are being followed by news anytime anywhere. This new normal has created a pressing need to investigate whether social media have brought any changes to both party-controlled and market-oriented news media in China in reporting crises. Comparing Xinhua News Agency (party-controlled) and The Paper (market-oriented), this study investigated how they reported COVID-19 and how their news consumers engaged with their COVID-19 news stories on Jinri Toutiao, a popular and yet special form of social media. This study found that Xinhua News Agency continued to stay overwhelmingly positive, while The Paper was more neutral in reporting the health crisis. Xinhua News Agency was surprisingly more episodic than The Paper in framing the pandemic. The Paper, however, had a higher level of user engagement than Xinhua News Agency. To cater to the changing news-seeking behaviors and patterns, both party-controlled and market-oriented news media have changed their operations, but not their fundamental orientations.
引用
收藏
页码:152 / 170
页数:19
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] IN OTHER COVID-19 NEWS
    Loeb, Josh
    VETERINARY RECORD, 2020, 186 (15) : 474 - 474
  • [42] News Briefs on COVID-19
    Kaye, Donald
    CLINICAL INFECTIOUS DISEASES, 2020, 71 (04) : I - II
  • [43] Reanimating experts and authorities: Functions of speech reporting in COVID-19 news
    Bunnag, Orawee
    Chaemsaithong, Krisda
    Park, Kyung-Eun
    DISCOURSE & COMMUNICATION, 2024,
  • [44] COVID-19 NEWS DIGEST
    不详
    US PHARMACIST, 2021, 46 (09) : 18 - 20
  • [45] Physician Trust in the News Media and Attitudes toward COVID-19
    Goidel, Kirby
    Callaghan, Timothy
    Washburn, David J.
    Nuzhath, Tasmiah
    Scobee, Julia
    Spiegelman, Abigail
    Motta, Matt
    JOURNAL OF HEALTH POLITICS POLICY AND LAW, 2023, 48 (03) : 317 - 350
  • [46] COVID-19 information in news media: room for greater transparency
    Rowhani-Farid, Anisa
    Hong, Kyungwan
    BMJ EVIDENCE-BASED MEDICINE, 2022, 27 (03) : 185 - 186
  • [47] Assessment of the use of preprint articles in reporting news in the Covid-19 era
    Caldwell, Ben
    Allcock, Graham
    Walton, Sophie
    Kendrick, Nikki
    CURRENT MEDICAL RESEARCH AND OPINION, 2021, 37 : 23 - 23
  • [48] Stockpiling moral panics: The politics of anxiety and the securitization of 'panic buyers' in news media reporting of Covid-19
    Phillips, Tarryn
    Couch, Danielle
    Vargas, Carmen
    Graham, Melissa
    Gleeson, Deborah
    CRIME MEDIA CULTURE, 2025,
  • [49] Social media and the COVID-19 pandemic: The dilemma of fake news clutter vs. social responsibility
    Ben Messaoud, Moez
    JOURNAL OF ARAB & MUSLIM MEDIA RESEARCH, 2021, 14 (01) : 25 - 45
  • [50] Comparing Traditional Machine Learning Methods for COVID-19 Fake News
    Almatarneh, Sattam
    Gamallo, Pablo
    Al Shargabi, Bassam
    Al-Khassawneh, Yazan
    Alzubi, Raed
    2021 22ND INTERNATIONAL ARAB CONFERENCE ON INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY (ACIT), 2021, : 736 - 739