Chapter 2
Footnotes
Ellen Mickiewicz, Split Signals: Television and
Politics in the Soviet Union (New York: Oxford University Press, 1988), in the series Communication
and Society, ed. by George Gerbner and Marsha Seifert.
Ellen Mickiewicz, Split Signals, 123.
Ellen Mickiewicz, Split Signals, 118-119.
Ellen Mickiewicz, Split Signals, 150.
Ellen Mickiewicz, Split Signals, 8-9, 22-23.
Ellen Mickiewicz, Split Signals, 109, 118.
Ellen Mickiewicz, Split Signals, 119-120, 145.
Ellen Mickiewicz, Split Signals, 148.
Ellen Mickiewicz, Split Signals, 29.
911 is a popular television program on Finnish television, but to incorporate the
techniques of a docudrama into Finnish television news reports would definitely alienate
most viewers.
Ellen Mickiewicz, Split Signals, 26.
From a July, 1994 Helsingin Sanomat report.
Ellen Mickiewicz, Split Signals, 29.
Howard Frederick, "Content Analysis in Marxist Communication Science," in Sari
Thomas, ed., Studies in Communicaton, Vol. 2 (Norwood, NJ: Ablex, 1984), 145-154.
Frederick quotes Bernard Berelson, "Content Analysis in Communication Research,"
Glencoe, IL: Free Press, 1952.
CNN Vs. the Networks: Is More News Better News? A Content Analysis of the Cable News
Network and the Three Broadcast Networks, (Washington, D.C.: The Media Institute),
xiii.
CNN Vs. the Networks, 10-12.
CNN Vs. the Networks, xvi.
This particular assumption, of course, was proved wrong during the Gulf War, and will be
discussed in later chapters.
These topics will also receive considerable attention in this study.
M. A. K. Halliday, A. McIntosh and P. Strevens, The Lingusitic Sciences and Language
Teaching (London: Longmans, 1964), 87.
One simple test would be to read a passage from the encyclopedia out loud and compare the
intonation and grammar to a recent conversaton with a friend.
Roger Fowler, Language in the News: Discourse and Ideology in the Press (London:
Routledge, 1991), 62.
Roger Fowler, Language in the News, 61-62.
Fernando Poyatos, Cross-Cultural Perspectives in Nonverbal Communication
(Toronto: Hogrefe, 1988).
Ronald Primeau, The Rhetoric of Television (New York and London: Longman, 1979),
142.
Roger Fowler, Language in the News, 62.
Roger Fowler, Language in the News, 62.
Roger Fowler, Language in the News, 64
One of the best (and, cross-culturally for a Finn, the most inane) examples of this is
"Happy Talk." Originated at WLS in Chicago in 1968, "Happy Talk" is a
term used to describe the gossipy banter between news anchors, weathermen and
sportscasters. "Happy Talk" was at first a trademark of ABC News but has now
become a standard feature of practically all commercial newscasts on American television
and is rapidly spreading to other countries as well. Happy Talk is derived from the
"bantering remarks made among anchormen, reporters, weathermen, and sportscasters
during transitions from topic to topic." Happy Talk, however, is broader in scope in
that it diverts the audience from "abstract," "disturbing,"
"vital" topics which may weigh the newscast down to make it too complicated or
dull. See Ron Powers, The Newscasters: The News Business as Show Business (New
York: St. Martin's Press, 1977), 35.
See Ron Powers, The Newscasters, 35 and Roger Fowler, Language in the News,
62.
Hallin writes: "Television, it is said, is personal: the news is brought to us not by
anonymous writers but by individuals selected in no small part for a persona that combines
authority with likability. It is well known that polls once showed Walter Cronkite to be
the most "trusted" man in America. Television is also visual, people may feel
that they are "seeing it for themselves" on television. ...unlike most newspaper
reports, television stories tend to be tightly organized around a particular "story
line" or interpretation.
Hallin, Daniel C. , "We Keep America on Top of the World," in Gitlin, Todd, ed.,
Watching Television (New York: Pantheon Book, 1987) 26-27.
Ronald Primeau, The Rhetoric of Television, 142-143.
Doug Newsom and James Wollert, Media Writing: News for the Mass Media (California:
Wadsworth, 1985), 12-13.
Doug Newsom and James Wollert, Media Writing: News for the Mass Media, 106-107.
The strict time limits imposed on commercial television news have led politicians to
criticize the media for offering them only limited "sound bites" for explaining
their platforms. Crawford, Frederick and Gerbner, in their paper, "Commercials in the
Classroom," attribute the growing problem that audiences do not understand issues to
the existence of the sound bite and photo op. "Politicians already blame the media
for demanding that every issue be reduced to a sound bite; the media, in turn, claim that
sound bites are what the public demands, because the public's attention span has dwindled
so." From PeaceNet, media.issues conference.
Doug Newsom and James Wollert, Media Writing: News for the Mass Media, 108.
Fred Friendly is a controversial figure in American broadcasting. He was best known as
Edward R. Murrow's hardnosed sidekick. He moved up to the position of Director of CBS
News, working with Walter Cronkite during the 1960s, and resigned over CBS's reluctance to
be critical enough of U.S. policy in Vietnam.
See also Edward Bliss, Jr. and John M. Patterson, Writing News for Broadcast (New
York: Columbia University Press, 1978), ix-xi.
Edward Bliss, Jr. and John M. Patterson, Writing News for Broadcast, ix-xi.
Edward Bliss, Jr. and John M. Patterson, Writing News for Broadcast, 39.
Edward Bliss, Jr. and John M. Patterson, Writing News for Broadcast, 72.
Edward Bliss, Jr. and John M. Patterson, Writing News for Broadcast, 73.
Edward Bliss, Jr. and John M. Patterson, Writing News for Broadcast, 74.
Edward Bliss, Jr. and John M. Patterson, Writing News for Broadcast, 74.
Edward Bliss, Jr. and John M. Patterson, Writing News for Broadcast, 75.
Edward Bliss, Jr. and John M. Patterson, Writing News for Broadcast, 95.
Edward Bliss, Jr. and John M. Patterson, Writing News for Broadcast, 103.
BEdward Bliss, Jr. and John M. Patterson, Writing News for Broadcast, 103-104.
Edward Bliss, Jr. and John M. Patterson, Writing News for Broadcast, 103.
Edward Bliss, Jr. and John M. Patterson, Writing News for Broadcast, 2.
...dass Stil nicht in Bezug auf nur eine Sprachebene (wie die der Grammatik oder der
des Vokabulars) erklaert werden kann, sondern dass Stil aus einem Wechselspiel der
Sprachorganisation auf vershiedenen Ebenen resultiert...
Compare: Hartmut Schroeder, Jerry Schuchalter, Brett Dellinger, Lacunaology:
Studies in Intercultural Communication. (Vaasa: Vaasan yliopiston julkaisuja, No.
196, 1995).
...ein Text hat nicht Stil, sondern ihm wird Stil zugesprochen; Stil entsteht erst im
Rahmen und durch die Autor-Leser-Kommunikation...
Compare: Hartmut Schroeder, Jerry Schuchalter, Brett Dellinger, Lacunaology:
Studies in Intercultural Communication. (Vaasa: Vaasan yliopiston julkaisuja, No.
196, 1995).
See ahead for a discussion of lacunae in cross-cultural communication.
Ruth Wodak, ed., Language Power and Ideology: Studies in Political Discourse
(London: Benjamins Publishing Company, 1989), xv-xvi.