en
Jodie Jackson

You Are What You Read

Meld me wanneer het boek is toegevoegd
Dit boek lezen upload een EPUB- of FB2-bestand naar Bookmate. Hoe kan ik een boek uploaden?
  • Sofiaciteerde uit3 jaar geleden
    This is because the mind tricks us into thinking that the more we hear about something, the more prevalent it is.
  • Sofiaciteerde uit3 jaar geleden
    1. The person or people who see the news happen – they see this event selectively; some things are noticed and some are not.
    2. The reporter who talks to the initial source(s). They decide which facts to pass along, how to shape the story and which parts to emphasise.
    3. The editor, who receives the story and decides to cut, add, change or leave as is.
    4. The aggregated broadcast channels. Some news stories make it to the big screen; completed and submitted by editors, these news stories are now at the mercy of the broadcaster, who decides which ones to show on the national news channel.
    5. If the story goes overseas, further gatekeepers will decide if it is worthy of their time, regardless of whether it is broadcast or print.
  • Sofiaciteerde uit3 jaar geleden
    the news ‘must hold a mirror behind the nation and the world
  • Sofiaciteerde uit3 jaar geleden
    Because most of the stories we hear about in the news are not ones that we experience first-hand, we depend on the media to inform us on them and essentially construct this ‘reality’ for us.
  • Sofiaciteerde uit3 jaar geleden
    This is because the way information is processed in our minds makes us unable to distinguish between media and non-media inputs.1 This means that a media narrative can become the functional equivalent to personal experience, creating memories, shaping knowledge and founding beliefs in the same way as other genuine experiences in our lives.2
  • Sofiaciteerde uit3 jaar geleden
    The only type of violence that appears to be growing is terrorism – and even this threat, while tragic, aggressive and real, is still enormously overestimated. The average European is seven times more likely to die from falling down the stairs than be killed from a terrorist attack.
  • Sofiaciteerde uit3 jaar geleden
    This is because the news is an invisible but powerful influence on our thoughts, telling us not only what to think about (by deciding what is reported) but also how to think about it (through news frames and organisational bias).
  • Sofiaciteerde uit3 jaar geleden
    those who know the why of anything will always find the how.
  • Sofiaciteerde uit3 jaar geleden
    The information that we imbibe will turn into emotions, thoughts, actions and behaviours. The consequences are less visible but just as potent
  • annakovshunciteerde uit3 jaar geleden
    those who know the why of anything will always find the how
fb2epub
Sleep je bestanden hiernaartoe (maximaal 5 per keer)