Discuss the transformation of media from a "one-way" channel of information transmission to "two-way" street of information exchange.
What will be an ideal response?
The traditional media and the Internet in the early years functioned as a "one-way" means for people to receive information. As Internet bandwidth increased, so did the sophistication of web content. The result has been a new pattern of 21st-century communication in which communication is a two-way street that is no longer mediated by media outlets. This "two-way" communication enables conversations about information, rather than just information reception, and has created a hybrid of producers and consumers of the news.
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Based on the process division of the balance-of-power period in Europe,
the third period in the nineteenth-century balance-of-power system was far less moderate than the second and was marked by five wars. Indicate whether this statement is true or false
The McGovern-Fraser Commission made the delegate selection process of the Democratic party more democratic by __________.
a. giving the power of selecting delegates to party officials b. increasing the number of delegates chosen c. weakening the power of party leaders to choose convention delegates d. encouraging the use of presidential caucuses rather than primaries e. requiring delegate selection procedures to be open
What limitation does the exclusionary rule put in place?
A. A court can order or constrain an action by an individual. B. Evidence obtained from an illegal search and seizure cannot be used in a trial. C. Fighting words can be excluded from constitutional protection. D. People who are biased against a defendant may be excluded from serving on a jury. E. Evidence wrongly excluded at trial may not be used in appellate court later.
Which of the following is implied by the term pack journalism?
a. the shrinking number of print media outlets b. journalists who embed themselves in situations of conflict c. journalists who imitate one another rather than reporting independently d. the ever-growing size of the political press corps