Thursday, February 18, 2010

How to watch tv news by Neil Postman revised by Steve Powers

In September 2007, a study by the Project for Excellence in Journalism showed that people who went online for their news gravitated toward topics different from those offered on television. And this statement is fact. Many viewers have free access to whatever story that would like to obtain as for television, which news focuses on whats really happening around the world. Many People have been at faulted including yself to find that the internet news is more convenient than those of television. A leading was researched upon this topic, the article below:

How Do You Get Your News?
With the multitude of competing mediums these days, it's easy to pick and choose your information inputs. Newspapers, television, RSS, Twitter—how do you mix and pick your news sources?

Thomas Baekdal details the patterns of communication over the last hundred years and the shifts that have occurred. If your great-grandparents wanted to stay current on the news, for instance, they had to make a conscious effort to be places where people were talking about it. Now you can have it streamed, beamed, and delivered.

Where do you fall on the chart pictured above? Newspaper reader? Avid talk radio listener? All internet news, all the time? Tell us how you get your news, and where you think you'll be getting it in years to come, in the comments.

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