A) Wall Street.
B) political parties.
C) churches and other religious groups.
D) state governments.
E) the federal government.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) National news reporters, as opposed to local reporters with less access, are generally more favorable toward politicians.
B) Most radio news is essentially a headline service.
C) More local news reporters than national reporters are inclined to give politicians positive coverage.
D) Most television news offers more headlines and sound bites than analysis.
E) Politicians often seek to manipulate the news by providing the media with sound bites that will dominate news coverage for at least a few days.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) digital citizenship.
B) nonprofit journalism.
C) the penny press.
D) news aggregators.
E) niche journalism.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) bandwagon
B) horse race
C) momentum
D) lame duck
E) dog show
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Multiple Choice
A) the convenience of getting the news online
B) the up-to-the-moment currency of the information available online
C) the depth of the information available online
D) the diversity of online viewpoints
E) the accuracy and objectivity of the information found online
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) the rise of the Internet as a major source of news reporting
B) the growing level of government censorship and restrictions on the media
C) the corporate consolidation of news media into a small number of conglomerates
D) the increasing popularity of AM radio talk shows
E) the growing popularity of newspapers as a source of news
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) during the administration of James Monroe in the 1810s.
B) in the early twentieth century by a public relations firm working for a railroad.
C) by Franklin Roosevelt in 1933.
D) by P. T. Barnum as a way of publicizing his circus.
E) by Abraham Lincoln during the Civil War.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) the right to vote in elections.
B) a college education.
C) experience with political participation offline.
D) the basic skills necessary to read a simple newspaper article.
E) a government-issued ID number.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) how prominent political figures inevitably fail to influence media coverage on important events.
B) how selection bias is much less important than ideological bias in understanding media coverage.
C) how the preferences of better educated and more affluent segments of the audience have little influence over the content of media coverage.
D) the declining homogenization of national news since passage of the Telecommunications Act of 1996.
E) how prominent political figures can manipulate news coverage and secure the publication of stories that serve their purposes through leaking information to journalists.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) A free media is needed to investigate wrongdoing on the part of government officials.
B) A free media is needed to publicize and explain governmental actions.
C) A free media is needed to evaluate the performance of politicians.
D) A free media is needed to shed light on matters that may otherwise be known only to a small number of government insiders with technical knowledge.
E) A free media is needed to ensure economic equality.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) the right of rebuttal
B) the equal time rule
C) the fairness doctrine
D) the diversity in media doctrine
E) the agenda-setting provision
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) a decline in investigative journalism.
B) a reduction in the diversity of perspectives that can potentially be heard.
C) a negative impact on political knowledge.
D) a decrease in political tolerance.
E) uneven quality in news content.
Correct Answer
verified
True/False
Correct Answer
verified
True/False
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) The government controls most media content through regulations and tightly controlled press briefings.
B) The government owns, but does not control, the major sources of media.
C) The government does not own but regulates the content and ownership of broadcast media.
D) Broadcast media are not regulated in the United States.
E) The government heavily regulates print media but imposes no regulations on radio and television broadcasts.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) discouraged polarization because people can now access a wider array of viewpoints than before.
B) encouraged polarization because many media outlets seek to position themselves within a discrete ideological or partisan niche rather than maintain a middle-of-the-road stance.
C) discouraged polarization because it has eliminated selection bias by journalists.
D) encouraged polarization because it has led to the death of adversarial journalism.
E) had no effect whatsoever on polarization because most Americans are not influenced by media coverage.
Correct Answer
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Multiple Choice
A) 2 percent
B) 20 percent
C) 33 percent
D) 50 percent
E) 80 percent
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) local reporters.
B) wire services.
C) the Internet.
D) government reports, press briefings, and announcements.
E) interviews with politicians.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) newspapers
B) television
C) magazines
D) the Internet
E) satellite radio
Correct Answer
verified
True/False
Correct Answer
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