The pseudo-events paradox : how pseudo-events flood the Philippine press and why journalists don't recognize it
Daniel Boorstin introduced in 1961 the concept of "pseudo-events" of false realities which he said had been flooding the American Press (Boorstin, 1961). Four decades later, testing his concept on the Philippines Press, this study finds that his observation still holds true. This explorat...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-415242019-12-10T13:56:55Z The pseudo-events paradox : how pseudo-events flood the Philippine press and why journalists don't recognize it Edson C. Tandoc Jr Marko M Skoric Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information DRNTU::Social sciences::Journalism::Ethics and religion aspects Daniel Boorstin introduced in 1961 the concept of "pseudo-events" of false realities which he said had been flooding the American Press (Boorstin, 1961). Four decades later, testing his concept on the Philippines Press, this study finds that his observation still holds true. This exploratory study, using content analysis of 2,330 news articles and a survey of 100 jornalists, offers the concept of the "pseudo-events paradox". Though journalists perceive there are more spontaneous events in their work and that these have better chances of being published, published news articles about pseudo-events actually outnumber those based on spontaneous events. News articles based on pseudo-events are usually obtaine through personal interviews, press conferences and press releases, methods Boorstin had associated with pseudo-events and which journalists admitted were among the easiest data gathering methods.Politicians, found to be among the most active stagers of events, were also the most quoted sources. Master of Mass Communication 2010-07-16T06:15:38Z 2010-07-16T06:15:38Z 2008 2008 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10356/41524 en Nanyang Technological University 79 p. application/pdf |
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DRNTU::Social sciences::Journalism::Ethics and religion aspects Edson C. Tandoc Jr The pseudo-events paradox : how pseudo-events flood the Philippine press and why journalists don't recognize it |
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Daniel Boorstin introduced in 1961 the concept of "pseudo-events" of false realities which he said had been flooding the American Press (Boorstin, 1961). Four decades later, testing his concept on the Philippines Press, this study finds that his observation still holds true.
This exploratory study, using content analysis of 2,330 news articles and a survey of 100 jornalists, offers the concept of the "pseudo-events paradox". Though journalists perceive there are more spontaneous events in their work and that these have better chances of being published, published news articles about pseudo-events actually outnumber those based on spontaneous events. News articles based on pseudo-events are usually obtaine through personal interviews, press conferences and press releases, methods Boorstin had associated with pseudo-events and which journalists admitted were among the easiest data gathering methods.Politicians, found to be among the most active stagers of events, were also the most quoted sources. |
author2 |
Marko M Skoric |
author_facet |
Marko M Skoric Edson C. Tandoc Jr |
format |
Theses and Dissertations |
author |
Edson C. Tandoc Jr |
author_sort |
Edson C. Tandoc Jr |
title |
The pseudo-events paradox : how pseudo-events flood the Philippine press and why journalists don't recognize it |
title_short |
The pseudo-events paradox : how pseudo-events flood the Philippine press and why journalists don't recognize it |
title_full |
The pseudo-events paradox : how pseudo-events flood the Philippine press and why journalists don't recognize it |
title_fullStr |
The pseudo-events paradox : how pseudo-events flood the Philippine press and why journalists don't recognize it |
title_full_unstemmed |
The pseudo-events paradox : how pseudo-events flood the Philippine press and why journalists don't recognize it |
title_sort |
pseudo-events paradox : how pseudo-events flood the philippine press and why journalists don't recognize it |
publishDate |
2010 |
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http://hdl.handle.net/10356/41524 |
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1681041002246176768 |