The concept of scandal is a central trope of today’s journalism, ranging from political coverage of the affairs of state down to the state of affairs in the celebrity press and media. Not only is there an apparently inexhaustible public appetite for rumours, speculations and provable dark deeds and saucy goings-on fed by scandals but also a considerable section of professional journalists and photojournalists earn their crust from it. In this introductory commentary some of the key concepts defining celebrity and scandal are introduced and some observations on the current state of public culture in New Zealand are examined
There is nothing new about celebrity culture. It is an intrinsic feature of a world structured by me...
Celebrity coverage is defined as mediated attention provided to well‐known individuals who through t...
The power of online media to influence New Zealand local government politics was made clear in 2013 ...
This issue of Pacific Journalism Review engages with the theme of the dynamics of fame in a small co...
THIS ISSUE of Pacific Journalism Review engages with the theme of the dynamics of fame in a small co...
Unlike the United Kingdom, the United States and Australia, where celebrities are often subjected to...
This paper considered the charitable ambassador role sports celebrities assume. The research analyse...
This thesis explores the world of celebrity scandal, investigating what happens when journalists rep...
This entry describes the characteristics of scandalization and media coverage. The entry explains th...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 28-30).Media outlets across the United States have long r...
As recent studies of contemporary news media have shown, there is an increasing trend among media ou...
Research on celebrity and public persona derives from fundamentally interdisciplinary sources. Altho...
Celebrity journalism is a founding discourse for the construction of persona. As the first mass-circ...
The term ‘accidental celebrity’ entered the Australian academic lexicon in 2000 as a way of describi...
In their study of news values in in the British press Harcup and O’Neill (2001) noted that celebrity...
There is nothing new about celebrity culture. It is an intrinsic feature of a world structured by me...
Celebrity coverage is defined as mediated attention provided to well‐known individuals who through t...
The power of online media to influence New Zealand local government politics was made clear in 2013 ...
This issue of Pacific Journalism Review engages with the theme of the dynamics of fame in a small co...
THIS ISSUE of Pacific Journalism Review engages with the theme of the dynamics of fame in a small co...
Unlike the United Kingdom, the United States and Australia, where celebrities are often subjected to...
This paper considered the charitable ambassador role sports celebrities assume. The research analyse...
This thesis explores the world of celebrity scandal, investigating what happens when journalists rep...
This entry describes the characteristics of scandalization and media coverage. The entry explains th...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 28-30).Media outlets across the United States have long r...
As recent studies of contemporary news media have shown, there is an increasing trend among media ou...
Research on celebrity and public persona derives from fundamentally interdisciplinary sources. Altho...
Celebrity journalism is a founding discourse for the construction of persona. As the first mass-circ...
The term ‘accidental celebrity’ entered the Australian academic lexicon in 2000 as a way of describi...
In their study of news values in in the British press Harcup and O’Neill (2001) noted that celebrity...
There is nothing new about celebrity culture. It is an intrinsic feature of a world structured by me...
Celebrity coverage is defined as mediated attention provided to well‐known individuals who through t...
The power of online media to influence New Zealand local government politics was made clear in 2013 ...