Book Review – News to Me: Adventures of an Accidental Journalist

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News to Me: Adventures of an Accidental Journalist. Laurie Hertzel. Minneapolis, MN: University of Min-nesota Press, 2010. 224 pp.

In her memoir, News to Me: Adventures of an Accidental Journalist, Laurie Hertzel makes short work of her first husband.

No, he wasn’t the subject of one of the many homicide stories published in the Duluth News-Tribune during Hertzel’s eighteen years on the staff. He is, rather, a very minor character in this coming-of-age story about Hertzel’s life at the mid-sized northern Minnesota daily.  [Read more...]

Book Review – News Agencies in the Turbulent Era of the Internet

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News Agencies in the Turbulent Era of the Internet. Oliver Boyd-Barrett, ed. Barcelona, Spain: Government of Catalonia, Presidential Department, 2010. 313 pp.

This valuable anthology combines the work of nineteen authors who describe the state of world and national news agencies around the world. The volume is the fifth in the Catalan government’s Col-lecció Lexikon series of studies on different aspects of journalism. Three have appeared in the Catalan language, while this and one other on European press subsidies have been published in English. Though not stated specifically, the book appears to have been issued in celebration of the tenth anniversary (in 2009) of the formation of the Catalan News Agency (ACN), one of the few new European news agencies formed in recent years.  [Read more...]

Book Review – New New Media

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New New Media. Paul Levinson. Boston, MA: Allyn & Bacon, 2009. 225 pp.

It’s increasingly difficult to keep up with the rapid growth of new forms of communication created by the Internet. Change happens so fast that even a relatively new format—such as Wikipedia, launched in 2001—seems old and familiar just ten years later.

Paul Levinson, an author and professor of communication and media studies at Fordham University, says one characteristic that distinguishes “new new media” from simple “new media” is that in the newer form the consumer is also a producer.  [Read more...]

Book Review – Media Industries: History, Theory, and Method

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Media Industries: History, Theory, and Method. Jennifer Holt and Alisa Perren, eds. Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell, 2009. 283 pp.

Offering twenty original scholarly essays, this anthology provides a solid collection of recent surveys of various media industries, melding description, analysis, and even some predictions. Collectively, they provide a sense of how “media industries” is fast becoming a recognized field of study in its own right—along with an idea of some of the work still necessary to make that happen.  [Read more...]

Book Review – Journalism in Crisis: Corporate Media and Financialization

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Journalism in Crisis: Corporate Media and Financialization. Núria Almiron, trans. by William McGrath. New York: Hampton Press, Inc., 2010. 212 pp.

This is the most important available analysis of the crisis of journalism, exhibiting critical skills of which alarmingly few North American analysts are capable. Núria Almiron is lecturer and researcher in communication at Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona. Her political economy approach goes well beyond the platitudes of death-by-Internet sermonizing, even beyond the themes of concentration and overreach so well-rehearsed by Robert McChesney. McChesney and Nichols (2010) regret the passing of a Golden Age that preceded advertising. For Almiron, journalism is in perpetual crisis, hapless child of bourgeois parents—freedom of the press as formulated in the Declaration of Rights of the State of Virginia (1776) and in the French Revolution’s Declaration of the Rights of Man (1789), eternally abused by the “instrumentalization” of dominant classes.  [Read more...]

Book Review – The Criminal Justice Club: A Career Prosecutor Takes on the Media—and More

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The Criminal Justice Club: A Career Prosecutor Takes on the Media—and More. Walt Lewis. Montrose, CA: Walbar Books, 2008. 423 pp.

After thirty-two years as a deputy district attorney in Los Angeles County, Walt Lewis traces the crumbling of his “parental and media-influenced liberalism” as his experiences as a prosecutor taught him the “reality” of the criminal justice system. He suggests that due   largely to pervasive liberal bias in the media, such understanding is rare, be-longing primarily to members of “The Criminal Justice Club” that gives the book its title.  [Read more...]

Book Review – Audience Evolution: New Technologies and the Transformation of Media Audiences

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Audience Evolution: New Technologies and the Transformation of Media AudiencesNapoli, Philip M. (2011). New York: Columbia University Press. pp. 240.

Philip M. Napoli provides a critical cultural examination of the evolution of the concept of audience, beginning with its twentieth-century definition by media theorists and media practitioners. Persons within media industries, academia, and the consumer have redefined the conceptualization of audience, given the onset of the Internet in the twenty-first century. Napoli’s ideas help to shed light on the conceptualization of “audience” for the future. Scholars of journalism, mass communication, and cultural studies (as well as business) will find useful information in Napoli’s book, which provides new entrees into understanding how socially constructed definitions of audience are changing.  [Read more...]

Book Review – The Media Economy

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The Media EconomyAlbarran, Alan B. (2010). New York: Routledge. pp. 201.

With everyone looking for the business model that puts the economy back in media economy, books with that title raise great hope. The difficulty in writing a book about the media economy is that the ecosystem is so fluid that any attempt to describe it is in danger of becoming a history and not a model for the future.  [Read more...]