A by-product of today’s hybrid media system is that genres—once uniformly defined and enforced—are now murky and contested. We develop the concept of news-ness, defined as the extent to which audiences characterize specific content as news, to capture how audiences understand and process media messages. In this article, we (a) ground the concept of news-ness within research on media genres, journalism practices, and audience studies, (b) develop a theoretical model that identifies the factors that influence news-ness and its outcomes, and (c) situate news-ness within discussions about fake news, partisan motivated reasoning, and comparative studies of media systems.
CITATION STYLE
Edgerly, S., & Vraga, E. K. (2020). Deciding What’s News: News-ness As an Audience Concept for the Hybrid Media Environment. Journalism and Mass Communication Quarterly, 97(2), 416–434. https://doi.org/10.1177/1077699020916808
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