▍國際傳媒:2020/06/05~2020/06/11
✅The Washington Post|20200606
🔗ESPN has tried to focus more on sports, but that changed with George Floyd
At ESPN, politics by any definition has been a touchy subject during the Trump presidency; the network became a regular target of the “stick to sports” crowd whenever it was thought to have veered too far into off-the-field coverage of social justice issues — including coverage of protests by Colin Kaepernick and other NFL players against police brutality and racial injustice.
✅COLUMBIA JOURNALISM REVIEW |20200609
🔗As publishers rethink editorial norms, social media policies must follow
If there is any benefit for journalism to the shift in media control from press institutions to platforms as gatekeepers, it is that news organizations can deploy resources more thoughtfully in this regard.
✅COLUMBIA JOURNALISM REVIEW |20200611
🔗Black Media Respond to the Uprisings
As Black journalists face unprecedented personal risks, navigating the historical trauma and burden of daily racism to report on these national uprisings for racial justice, Black media center the journalists who work at Black-owned outlets, as well as their audiences.
✅WSJ |20200607
🔗Local Crime App Citizen Becomes a Key Tool During Protests
Downloads surge as users seek details on demonstrations, police movements.
✅ABC NEWS|20200611
🔗The ABC News constructive journalism approach reports on problems and solutions
Constructive journalism aims to provide a fair, accurate and contextualised picture of the world while avoiding overemphasis on the negative and the sensational.
✅PEW RESEARCH CENTER|20200605
🔗Black U.S. adults follow many COVID-19 news topics more closely, discuss the outbreak more frequently
What black Americans are discussing with others about the outbreak may be influenced by the topics of the outbreak they follow. Of 13 COVID-related topics asked about in the survey — both national and local — black Americans were more likely than white and Hispanic adults to be very closely following most of them. That gap in interest is particularly pronounced between black and white respondents.
整理:朱弘川╱編輯:鄭凱榕