Sources Make The News

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The relationship between news organizations and their sources is a very interesting one that consists of a lot of pushing and pulling from both directions. But at the end of the day, the sources are the ones that hold the power and news organizations would not exist if not for their sources. For this reason, news organizations are under high amounts of pressure to deliver the best and most accurate information that they can, so they are completely reliant on having strong sources and contacts for their stories.
In the article Sources Make the News, Leon Sigal emphasizes the importance of human interest stories and the effects that they have on consumers. Beginning with the penny press, human interest stories were seen as critical to the success
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(Sources Make the News) The President of the United States is the face of our country, so it is only fitting that he would have the highest coverage in politics. It has been estimated that as much as twenty percent of all of the evening news time has to do with the Commander in Chief. (Lecture 17) Since the President is constantly in the spotlight and the makes up a large fraction of the news, then it only makes sense that he has managed to control the media and the way that they frame him. In The New York Times’ article Latest Word on the Trail? I Take It Back, Jeremy Peters illustrates the vast control that the White House and the President exerts over the media during press conferences. “Quote approval is standard practice for the Obama campaign,” which is when a source demands to look over and approve a quote before it is published with their name attached. (Latest Word on the Trail? I Take It Back) Furthermore, the White House Press Secretary gets to deliver rehearsed messages to the reporters during public briefings, so the White House can manipulate the message they want to get across to the reporters. (President Obama, off the