Churnalism

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Churnalism is a

news agencies are used to create articles in newspapers and other news media.[1] Its purpose is to reduce cost by reducing original news-gathering and checking sources[2] to counter revenue lost with the rise of Internet news and decline in advertising, with a particularly steep fall in late 2015.[3] The origin of the word has been credited to BBC journalist Waseem Zakir. Churnalism is a portmanteau of "churn" and "journalism", referring to the perceived "churning out" of content by the press.[4]

Churnalism has increased to the point that many stories found in the press are not original.[3] The decline of original journalism has been associated with a corresponding rise in public relations.[5]

Prevalence

In his book

reporters.[2]
The result is a reduction of quality and accuracy, as the articles are open to manipulation and distortion.

A 2016 study of 1.8 million articles published by the U.S. and international editions of the HuffPost found that only 44% were written by staff journalists and thus could be considered original reporting.[8]

The journalist Waseem Zakir has been credited for coining the term churnalism while working for the BBC in 2008[4] (however, Zakir himself recollects it being a decade earlier).[9] According to Zakir, the trend towards this form of journalism involves reporters becoming more reactive and less proactive in searching for news: "You get copy coming in on the wires and reporters churn it out, processing stuff and maybe adding the odd local quote. It's affecting every newsroom in the country and reporters are becoming churnalists."

An editorial on the matter in the

golden age of journalism in which journalists were not subject to such pressures.[11]

Nick Davies and Roy Greenslade gave evidence on the matter to the Culture, Media and Sport Committee in 2009.[12]

Churnalism does not only occur in newspapers; for example,

Free: The Future of a Radical Price has been labelled churnalism.[13]

Economic causes

Traditional newspapers have cut staff as their advertising revenue has declined because of competition from other media such as television and the

media commentator Roy Greenslade said in response to this "print cliff fall" that newspapers had no future.[3]

Other commentators have said the modern journalism is increasingly being performed in a cheaper, high-volume way, describing the resulting product with derogatory terms such as newszak (combination of "news" and "muzak"),[16] infotainment and junk-food journalism.[17]

Speed

In their book No Time to Think,[18] authors Howard Rosenberg and Charles S. Feldman emphasised the role of speed in degrading the quality of modern journalism.[19] An example is given of the BBC guide for online staff which gives advice to ensure good quality but also the contradictory advice, "Get the story up as fast as you can… We encourage a sense of urgency—we want to be first."[19]

Combating churnalism

Some organizations and tools have arisen to combat churnalism. In April 2013, the American Sunlight Foundation, a non-profit organisation which advocates for openness and transparency, in partnership with the UK's Media Standards Trust, launched churnalism.com, an online tool to discover churn. It used a database of known press releases and compared the text of a submitted URL to determine what percentage of it was derived churn.[20]

The Register commented that some level of "churnalism" is both normal and healthy for news organisations, but said it considered the Media Standards Trust linked to campaigns supported by "wealthy and powerful individuals and celebrities" in favour of "state control of the media" in the UK, and claimed there was significant irony in the Sunlight Foundation tool launch announcement itself being "uncritically churned by many of the usual suspects".[21]

In Australia, the nationwide

ABC public TV service airs a highly critical weekly 15-minute programme, Media Watch, which regularly exposes churnalism, plagiarism, media bias and unethical behaviour by journalists and radio talk-back hosts.[22]

See also

References

  1. . Retrieved 23 November 2020.
  2. ^ a b Jackson, Sally (5 June 2008), "Fearing the rise of 'churnalism'", The Australian, archived from the original on 31 May 2009
  3. ^ a b c Roy Greenslade (27 May 2016). "Suddenly, national newspapers are heading for that print cliff fall". The Guardian. Retrieved 27 May 2016.
  4. ^
  5. ^ a b Mair, John (19 May 2009), Hacks beat Flacks to knockout in Pall Mall debate
  6. .
  7. ^ Merrill, Gary, Criticising the critical, The Journalist
  8. ^ Roy, Jean-Hugues (9 November 2017). "L'agrégation de news : quel taux d'originalité au HuffPost ?". European Journalism Observatory. EJO. Retrieved 29 January 2021.
  9. ^ Zakir, Waseem (25 January 2018), Waseem Zakir on Twitter
  10. ^ Wasserman, Herman (30 June 2008), "The dangers of 'churnalism'", moneyweb.co.za
  11. ^ Orlowski, Andrew (25 June 2009). "WiReD editor 'fesses to churnalism: Information wants to be stolen". The Register.
  12. ^ Nyhan, David (2 May 1991), "When trash appears as news", The Boston Globe
  13. ^ Macnamara, Jim R., The Impact of PR on the Media (PDF), Mass Communication Group, archived from the original (PDF) on 12 August 2008
  14. ^ newszak Archived 12 July 2014 at the Wayback Machine Word Spy. Retrieved: 9 July 2011.
  15. ^ a b Rosenberg, Howard; S. Feldman, Charles (19 August 2008), "Why Is Speed So Bad?", USA Today
  16. ^ Gitlin, Jonathan M. (24 April 2013). ""Churnalism" tracker catches journalists copying press releases, Wikipedia". Ars Technica. Retrieved 6 September 2020.
  17. ^ Page, Lewis (26 April 2013). "Announcement of 'churnalism detector' gets furiously churned". The Register. Retrieved 9 July 2013.
  18. ^ Media Watch official web site

External links