Skip to content
Licensed Unlicensed Requires Authentication Published by De Gruyter Mouton April 28, 2006

News and newsworthiness: A commentary

  • Pamela J Shoemaker EMAIL logo
From the journal Communications

Abstract

This commentary argues that the concept of news is a primitive term, one whose existence is not questioned, and that assumptions about the news need to be identified and questioned. One common assumption is that news is composed of things that are newsworthy, i. e., that news and newsworthiness are essentially the same, and that the prominence with which an event is covered in the news is an indicator of newsworthiness. Shoemaker's recent research with Akiba Cohen shows that news and newsworthiness are in fact not the same. News is a social construct, a thing, a commodity, whereas newsworthiness is a cognitive construct, a mental judgment. Newsworthiness is not a good predictor of which events get into the newspaper and how they are covered. Newsworthiness is only one of a vast array of factors that influence what becomes the news and how prominently events are covered.

Published Online: 2006-04-28
Published in Print: 2006-04-20

© Walter de Gruyter

Downloaded on 24.4.2024 from https://www.degruyter.com/document/doi/10.1515/COMMUN.2006.007/html
Scroll to top button