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Entertainment journalism

Form of journalism that focuses on popular culture


Form of journalism that focuses on popular culture

Entertainment journalism is any form of journalism that focuses on popular culture and the entertainment business and its products. Like fashion journalism, entertainment journalism covers industry-specific news while targeting general audiences beyond those working in the industry itself. Common forms include lifestyle, television and film, theater, music, video game, and celebrity coverage.

Comparison with news journalism

News journalism deals with information of current events or reports of events that have previously occurred. The main purpose of this type of journalism is to inform. Entertainment journalism deals with information of the entertainment industry such as films, television shows, events, music, fashion and video games among others. The main purpose of this type of journalism is to entertain. In this area of journalism, however, it is not just about the pure reproduction of facts, as the Central European journalist Norman Schenz sums it up: "We no longer just write about an event, we tell stories"

Journalists can skew facts in a particular matter that cause their story to come across as entertainment. This action can have a profound effect on the consumer, making the authenticity of the report questionable. Cases of this problem can occur in news articles, magazines, and documentaries.

Internet

The rise of the internet allowed many amateur and semi-professional personalities to start their own blogs and personal fan sites relating to entertainment journalism.

The Me Too movement can trace its roots to entertainment journalism as the centrepiece of it is Harvey Weinstein, a Hollywood mogul who not only produced independent and blockbuster films but has also worked on television and theater.

References

References

  1. "Entertainment Journalist". getinmedia.com.
  2. "National Entertainment Journalism Awards". lapressclub.org.
  3. Abry, Madelyn. "In defense of entertainment journalism". berkeleybeacon.com.
  4. "Definition of NEWS".
  5. "Definition of ENTERTAINMENT".
  6. "Journalism, Film and Entertainment Arts".
  7. „Society-Berichterstattung im Wandel. Wer berichtete denn noch über Promis? (German: “Society reporting in transition. Who else reported on celebrities?) In: Wiener Zeitung 28 June 2013.
  8. "With The Jinx, where does journalism end and entertainment begin?". Columbia Journalism Review.
  9. "Journalism – Arts and Entertainment".
  10. Collarts. "Entertainment Journalism At Collarts - Diploma".
  11. "Entertainment Journalism".
  12. "Entertainment Journalist".
  13. ''The Future of Quality News Journalism: A Cross-Continental Analysis'' (Routledge: 2014: eds. Peter J. Anderson, Michael Williams & George Ogola), p. 112.
  14. "Reporting from the Red Carpet".
  15. Sterling, Christopher H.. (2009-09-25). "Encyclopedia of Journalism". SAGE Publications.
  16. (2017-12-11). "MEDPL 239 {{!}} Entertainment Journalism".
  17. Brown, Phil. (2019-01-30). "Why I quit entertainment journalism".
  18. "The decline and fall of entertainment reporting".
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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