scholarly journals Interactional Alarms: Experts’ Framing of Health Risks in Live Broadcast News Interviews

2017 ◽  
Vol 33 (10) ◽  
pp. 1257-1266
Author(s):  
Rony Armon
2021 ◽  
Vol 15 (6) ◽  
pp. 672-689
Author(s):  
Joanna Thornborrow ◽  
Mats Ekström ◽  
Marianna Patrona

This paper focuses on the relationship between journalism and right wing populist discourses in the context of broadcast news interviews. We analyse a specific feature of question design in which the public is invoked as a source of opinionated positions in adversarial interviewing. Analysing data from a range of socio-political contexts, we identify a shift in adversarial questioning along a scale of ‘soft’ populism, that is the attribution of views and concerns to a generic public ‘in crisis’, to ‘hard’ populism, where interviewers construct hypothetical scenarios in which populist positions are attributed to ‘some people’. We argue that the democratic role of journalists as public watchdogs, holding politicians and public figures accountable on behalf of the public, is challenged by this normalisation of populist moral order discourses in a routine journalistic practice, both drawing on and contributing to the propagation of populist agendas and anti-democratic populist rhetoric.


2008 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hugo Meinedo ◽  
Marcio Viveiros ◽  
Joao Neto

2001 ◽  
Vol 30 (3) ◽  
pp. 403-442 ◽  
Author(s):  
STEVEN E. CLAYMAN

This article provides an overview of the dynamics of answering and resisting or evading questions in broadcast news interviews. After a preliminary examination of the practices through which answers are recognizably constructed, the analysis turns to the practices through which interviewees manage responses that resist the agenda of an interviewer's question. When resisting overtly, interviewees engage in various forms of “damage control.” When resisting covertly, interviewees take steps to render the resistance less conspicuous. Both sets of practices facilitate resistant responses by reducing the negative consequences that might otherwise follow. Such practices demonstrate that, although interviewees have developed practices for resisting questions, the norm of answering remains a salient feature of the contemporary broadcast news interview.


Journalism ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 18 (1) ◽  
pp. 119-137
Author(s):  
Argyro Kantara

Ekström and Kroon Lundell, Ekström, Hutchby refer to hybridity in political news interviews as the mix of activities or the systematic shifting between speech exchange systems otherwise associated with non-interview settings. In their examination of journalists’ mixed interactional activities, both Hutchby and Ekström discuss how hybridity is explored as an interactional resource to question politicians and/or create an argumentative environment, breaching the neutralistic role of the broadcast news journalist. In this article, I examine instances of journalists’ breaching neutralism not through their hybrid questioning practices but through their listening practices in one-on-one interviews conducted during the 2012 Greek general election campaigns. In my data, journalists use hybrid listening practices to co-produce politicians’ arguments and to answer their own questions. Findings indicate that journalists’ hybrid listening practices provide political actors with new ways to mainstream and appropriate their manifestos to the public.


2009 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alfonso Ortega ◽  
Jose Enrique Garcia ◽  
Antonio Miguel ◽  
Eduardo Lleida

2020 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jingjing Ji

<p>With the development and popularization of Internet technology, the way of news network broadcast came into being. The number of live broadcast platforms and audiences has shown a blowout development in recent years. This new reporting mode makes communication more diversity, crosses the limitation of time and space, and has obvious reality. Through network broadcast, news can bring a better communication experience to the audience and the status of the audience is getting increasingly higher. News report is presented to the public in the form of live video, enabling the audiences to receive information synchronously. With the popularity of live broadcast platforms, everyone can become a communicator. However, these communication characteristics lead to many problems in the process of its development for news network broadcast.</p>


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