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发布时间:2024-08-23 23:39:55

[单项选择]Prominently displayed on the front page of the New York Times is the company motto: "All the News That’s Fit to Print." No form of mass media can carry every newsworthy event; all are constrained by costs and availability of space and time. For instance, the average daily newspaper fills approximately 62 percent of its space with advertising, leaving a mere 38 percent for news accounts, along with human interest stories, and pure entertainment features.
Contrary to the mirror-to-society myth, news is not simply out there; it must be picked from a multitude of happenings, What then is news Perhaps the best explanation is that "news is what reporters, editors, and producers decide is news."
Although the basis of news judgment often seems vague and unarticulated, Doris Graber has identified five criteria most often used in selecting stories.
* To qualify as news the story must have a high impact on the audience, that is, the events covered must be relevant to peopl
A. most interested in presenting a balanced, complete picture of the news
B. concerned with educating their audiences
C. very concerned with appealing to their audiences
D. interested in increasing the space devoted to news

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[单项选择]Prominently displayed on the front page of the New York Times is the company motto: "All the News That’s Fit to Print." No form of mass media can carry every newsworthy event; all are constrained by costs and availability of space and time. For instance, the average daily newspaper fills approximately 62 percent of its space with advertising, leaving a mere 38 percent for news accounts, along with human interest stories, and pure entertainment features.
Contrary to the mirror-to-society myth, news is not simply out there; it must be picked from a multitude of happenings, What then is news Perhaps the best explanation is that "news is what reporters, editors, and producers decide is news."
Although the basis of news judgment often seems vague and unarticulated, Doris Graber has identified five criteria most often used in selecting stories.
* To qualify as news the story must have a high impact on the audience, that is, the events covered must be relevant to peopl
A. reporters, editors, and producers decide what is news largely to keep audiences interested
B. newspapers print only the news that fits
C. news stories are selected for their high impact
D. audience interest is important because media outlets depend on the sale of advertising
[填空题]

A. front page
B. exclusive news
C. general news column
D. weather forecast
E. serial story
F. public notice
G. classified ads
H. flash news
I. literary criticism
J. Sunday features
K. news blackout
L. press ban
M. columnist
N. special correspondent
O. informed sources
P. newspaper campaign
Q. news conference
R. newspaper agency
S. subscription (rate)
T. newsprint

()分类广告()天气预报
[填空题]A
Seated behind the front desk at a New York firm, the receptionist was efficient, stylishly dressed, the firm’s newest employee had a pleasant telephone voice and a natural charm that put clients at ease. The company was pleased: Clearly, this was a person who took considerable pride in personal appearance. David King, the receptionist, is unusual, but by no means unique. Just as all truck drivers and construction workers are no longer necessarily men, all secretaries and receptionists are no longer automatically women. The number of men in women-dominated fields is still small and they haven’t attracted the attention that has often followed women advancing into male-dominated fields, but men are moving into more and more jobs that have traditionally been held by women.
B
What kinds of men venture into these so-called women’s fields All kinds. I don’t know of any define answers I’d be comfortable with, explains Joseph Pleck, Ph. D of the Wellesley College Cent
[单项选择]On the front page of the FT (Finance Times ) last Tuesday was a photo of three white men in their 60s all shaking hands together.
This was not terribly remarkable: every day the FT is full of pictures of white men approaching retirement age. What was odd about this trio was their extraordinary uniformity. On the left was Phil Condit, departing chief executive of Boeing, and on the right the man who is to take his place.
Both men had the same glasses, the same short brown hair receding sharply at the temples. They were in the same navy blazers with brass buttons and the same button-down shirts with the same top button ill-advisedly undone to reveal the same section of loose neck. The only difference was that the outgoing guy seemed to have eaten more business lunches and looked tougher.
Between them sat Lew Platt, the new chairman, who had dared to be different by wearing grey instead of navy, but otherwise it was the same story with the hair, specs, shirt and neck.
A. Because the picture is on the front page of Finance Times.
B. Because the three men in the picture are all in their 60s.
C. Because all the three men are famous tycoons.
D. Because the three men in the picture dress alik

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