From Cronkite to Colbert: The Evolution of Broadcast News

  • Cutbirth J
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Abstract

In a time when increasing numbers of people are tuning out the nightly news and media consumption is falling, the late-night comedians have become some of the most important newscasters in the country. From Cronkite to Colbertexplains why. It examines an historical path that begins at the height of the network age with Walter Cronkite and Edward R. Murrow, when the evening news was considered the authoritative record of the day's events and forged our assumptions about what 'the news' is, or should be. The book then winds its way through the breakdown of that paradigm of 'real' news and into its reinvention in the unlikely form of such popularized shows as The Daily Showand The Colbert Report. From Cronkite to Colbertmakes the case that rather than 'fake news,' those shows should be understood as a new kind of journalism, one that has the potential to save the news and reinvigorate the conversation of democracy in today's society.

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APA

Cutbirth, J. (2010). From Cronkite to Colbert: The Evolution of Broadcast News. Rhetoric and Public Affairs, 13(3), 533–536. https://doi.org/10.2307/41936473

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