By: Kabir Handa
100298475
Kabir Handa
English 1100 Sec 27
Tara Fleming
Monday, 2 December, 2013
The Cyber Revolution of News
In the modern day, conventional news systems have continued to prosper. Television and newspaper media provide daily, hourly, and even on the minute updates on issues that matter. Information can take a giant leap from one side of the globe to the other instantly in the form of words, images, and videos. However, according to Neil Postman and Steve Powers in their article, All the World in Pictures, the “recreations” that are aired on television distort the tangibility of the information subjected to the general population. As the audience craves entertainment in “moving pictures” alongside “signaling” music, the media corporations succumb to over-dramatization of events. As consumers desperately search for a new plug for news dissemination, one outlet stand as pre-eminent. Online news networks provide detailed articles apace with other forms of media such as images, videos, and audio recordings. Not only has the online world merged newspapers and television into one being, it is upholding a platform in which individuals from across the world can voice their input on an issue. With advancements in technology especially in the “smart gadgets” sector, news is easily accessible in the palm of one’s hand and this leaves many with the question, are online news networks eradicating the need of conventional news systems? To answer this question one must first understand how news is distributed in the online world as there are countless more competitors existing in “the web,” it is difficult to differentiate what is factual and indisputable.
Just as any consumer product “brand imaging” is everything. A corporation will go to any cost to gain awareness of their product. In the context of news, industry icons such as CNN and BBC have extended their pull into
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