Anglo-American journalism has typically drawn a firm dividing line between those who report the news and those who run the business of news. This boundary, often referred to in the West as a ‘Chinese Wall’, is designed to uphold the independence of journalists from commercial interests or the whims of news proprietors. But does this separation still exist in today’s age of social media and at a time when news revenues are under unprecedented pressure? This article focuses on Twitter, now a widely used tool in the newsroom, analysing the Twitter output of 10 UK political correspondents during the busy party conference season. It examines how they promote their own stories or ‘personal brand’ and whether they are stepping over a once forbidde...
Svenja Ottovordemgentschenfelde is a Fellow at Tow Center for Digital Journalism and a PhD candidate...
Social media use is now commonplace across journalism, in spite of lingering unease about the impact...
Twitter has developed an increasingly visible presence in Australian journalism, and in the discussi...
Anglo-American journalism has typically drawn a firm dividing line between those who report the news...
The normative practices and unwritten rules of Anglo-American journalism that emerged in the late 19...
Professional ideology and newsroom culture have become deeply embedded and codified in Anglo-America...
Twitter as a journalistic or (self-)promotional tool for news rooms Case studies from Flanders, the ...
This document is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis Group in Journal...
Twitter makes visible some of the most fundamental divides in professional journalism today. It reve...
This study explores journalists’ use of Twitter and what it means for their craft. Based on 8 weeks ...
Twitter has become a convenient, cheap and effective beat for journalists in search of news and info...
The article investigates media organizations’ strategies to adapt to the new media ecology in which ...
This study focuses on the tweeting habits of journalists with different job roles at a UK city newsp...
Social media use is now commonplace across journalism, in spite of lingering unease about the impact...
This article aims to identify the hybridization that journalists have created to reconcile the press...
Svenja Ottovordemgentschenfelde is a Fellow at Tow Center for Digital Journalism and a PhD candidate...
Social media use is now commonplace across journalism, in spite of lingering unease about the impact...
Twitter has developed an increasingly visible presence in Australian journalism, and in the discussi...
Anglo-American journalism has typically drawn a firm dividing line between those who report the news...
The normative practices and unwritten rules of Anglo-American journalism that emerged in the late 19...
Professional ideology and newsroom culture have become deeply embedded and codified in Anglo-America...
Twitter as a journalistic or (self-)promotional tool for news rooms Case studies from Flanders, the ...
This document is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis Group in Journal...
Twitter makes visible some of the most fundamental divides in professional journalism today. It reve...
This study explores journalists’ use of Twitter and what it means for their craft. Based on 8 weeks ...
Twitter has become a convenient, cheap and effective beat for journalists in search of news and info...
The article investigates media organizations’ strategies to adapt to the new media ecology in which ...
This study focuses on the tweeting habits of journalists with different job roles at a UK city newsp...
Social media use is now commonplace across journalism, in spite of lingering unease about the impact...
This article aims to identify the hybridization that journalists have created to reconcile the press...
Svenja Ottovordemgentschenfelde is a Fellow at Tow Center for Digital Journalism and a PhD candidate...
Social media use is now commonplace across journalism, in spite of lingering unease about the impact...
Twitter has developed an increasingly visible presence in Australian journalism, and in the discussi...