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Media Ethics : Issues and Cases.

By: Contributor(s): Publisher: Blue Ridge Summit : Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2021Copyright date: ©2021Edition: 10th edDescription: 1 online resource (409 pages)Content type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9781538142387
  • (electronic bk.)
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Print version:: Media EthicsLOC classification:
  • P94 .M36 2022
Online resources:
Contents:
Cover -- Half-title -- Title page -- Copyright information -- Dedication -- Brief Contents -- Table of contents -- Foreword -- Preface -- 1 An Introduction to Ethical Decision- Making -- Essay: Cases and moral systems -- Case 1-A: How to read a case study -- Part I: Foundations -- 2 Information Ethics: A Profession Seeks the Truth -- Case 2-A: Rules of engagement: Mary Louise Kelly and the Mike Pompeo interview -- Case 2-B: Don't tweet ill of the dead -- Case 2-C: Dr. Doolittle not: Debunking fake animal stories -- Case 2-D: Anonymous or confidential: Unnamed news sources in the news -- Case 2-E: Death as content: Social responsibility and the documentary filmmaker -- Case 2-F: When is objective reporting irresponsible reporting? -- 3 Privacy: Looking for Solitude in the Global Village -- Case 3-A: Harry and Meghan: Context and control -- Case 3-B: Guilty by Google: Unpublishing and crime reporting in the digital age -- Case 3-C: Drones and the news -- Case 3-D: Doxxer, doxxer, give me the news? -- Case 3-E: Looking for Richard Simmons -- Case 3-F: Children and framing: The use of children's images in an anti-same-sex marriage ad -- 4 Loyalty: Choosing between Competing Allegiances -- Case 4-A: Cuomo interviews Cuomo -- Case 4-B: To watch or to report: What journalists were thinking in the midst of disaster -- Case 4-C: Public/ on-air journalist versus private/online life: Can it work? -- Case 4-D: When you are the story: Sexual harassment in the newsroom -- Case 4-E: Where everybody knows your name: Reporting and relationships in a small market -- Case 4-F: Quit, blow the whistle, or go with the flow? -- 5 Mass Media in a Democratic Society: Keeping a Promise -- Case 5-A: Murder the media: Ethics on January 6, 2021 -- Case 5-B: A second draft of history: The New York Times's 1619 Project.
Case 5-C: When journalists question algorithms and automated systems -- Case 5-D: Watchdog or horndog: Daily Mail, revenge porn, and Katie Hill -- Case 5-E: Mayor Jim West's computer -- Case 5-F: For God and country: The media and national security -- 6 Informing a Just Society -- Case 6-A: The Kansas City Star in black and white: A newspaper apologizes for 140 years of coverage -- Case 6-B: Journalism and activism? When identity becomes political -- Case 6-C: Where's the line? Covering racial protest on a college campus -- Case 6-D: Spotlight: It takes a village to abuse a child -- Case 6-E: Cincinnati Enquirer's heroin beat -- Case 6-F: GoldieBlox: Building a future on theft -- Part II: Applications -- 7 Strategic Communication: Does Client Advocate Mean Consumer Adversary? -- Case 7-A: Fyre Festival becomes Fyre Fraud -- Case 7-B: Through the glass darkly: Peloton, body shaming, and America's odd relationship with exercise -- Case 7-C: Weedvertising -- Case 7-D: Keeping up with the Kardashians' prescription drug choices -- Case 7-E: Between a (Kid) Rock and a hard place -- Case 7-F: Was that an Apple computer I saw? Product placement in the United States and abroad -- 8 Picture This: Technology, Visual Information, and Evolving Standards -- Case 8-A: New York Times ends political cartoons -- Case 8-B: Did you meme that? The unhoppy life of Pepe the Frog -- Case 8-C: Remember my fame: Digital necromancy and the immortal celebrity -- Case 8-D: Problem photos and public outcry -- Case 8-E: Above the fold: Balancing newsworthy photos with community standards -- Case 8-F: Horror in Soweto -- 9 Media Economics: The Deadline Meets the Bottom Line -- Case 9-A: Twitter's Trump problem -- Case 9-B: When investigative reporting is bad for business -- Case 9-C: And the Oscar rejects . . . Frida Mom.
Case 9-D: Who controls the local news? Sinclair Broadcast Group and "must-runs" -- Case 9-E: Contested interests, contested terrain: The New York Times Code of Ethics -- Case 9-F: Automated journalism: The rise of robot reporters -- 10 The Ethical Dimensions of Art and Entertainment -- Case 10-A: Documenting culture clash in American Factory -- Case 10-B: The Daily Show's one-client legal team -- Case 10-C: #OscarsSoWhite: Representation in the creative process -- Case 10-D: Get Out: When the horror is race -- Case 10-E: To die for: Making terrorists of gamers in Modern Warfare 2 -- Case 10-F: The Onion: Finding humor in mass shootings -- 11 Becoming a Moral Adult -- References -- Index.
Holdings
Item type Current library Home library Call number Status Date due Barcode
eBooks eBooks American University in Dubai American University in Dubai P94 .M36 2022 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available

Cover -- Half-title -- Title page -- Copyright information -- Dedication -- Brief Contents -- Table of contents -- Foreword -- Preface -- 1 An Introduction to Ethical Decision- Making -- Essay: Cases and moral systems -- Case 1-A: How to read a case study -- Part I: Foundations -- 2 Information Ethics: A Profession Seeks the Truth -- Case 2-A: Rules of engagement: Mary Louise Kelly and the Mike Pompeo interview -- Case 2-B: Don't tweet ill of the dead -- Case 2-C: Dr. Doolittle not: Debunking fake animal stories -- Case 2-D: Anonymous or confidential: Unnamed news sources in the news -- Case 2-E: Death as content: Social responsibility and the documentary filmmaker -- Case 2-F: When is objective reporting irresponsible reporting? -- 3 Privacy: Looking for Solitude in the Global Village -- Case 3-A: Harry and Meghan: Context and control -- Case 3-B: Guilty by Google: Unpublishing and crime reporting in the digital age -- Case 3-C: Drones and the news -- Case 3-D: Doxxer, doxxer, give me the news? -- Case 3-E: Looking for Richard Simmons -- Case 3-F: Children and framing: The use of children's images in an anti-same-sex marriage ad -- 4 Loyalty: Choosing between Competing Allegiances -- Case 4-A: Cuomo interviews Cuomo -- Case 4-B: To watch or to report: What journalists were thinking in the midst of disaster -- Case 4-C: Public/ on-air journalist versus private/online life: Can it work? -- Case 4-D: When you are the story: Sexual harassment in the newsroom -- Case 4-E: Where everybody knows your name: Reporting and relationships in a small market -- Case 4-F: Quit, blow the whistle, or go with the flow? -- 5 Mass Media in a Democratic Society: Keeping a Promise -- Case 5-A: Murder the media: Ethics on January 6, 2021 -- Case 5-B: A second draft of history: The New York Times's 1619 Project.

Case 5-C: When journalists question algorithms and automated systems -- Case 5-D: Watchdog or horndog: Daily Mail, revenge porn, and Katie Hill -- Case 5-E: Mayor Jim West's computer -- Case 5-F: For God and country: The media and national security -- 6 Informing a Just Society -- Case 6-A: The Kansas City Star in black and white: A newspaper apologizes for 140 years of coverage -- Case 6-B: Journalism and activism? When identity becomes political -- Case 6-C: Where's the line? Covering racial protest on a college campus -- Case 6-D: Spotlight: It takes a village to abuse a child -- Case 6-E: Cincinnati Enquirer's heroin beat -- Case 6-F: GoldieBlox: Building a future on theft -- Part II: Applications -- 7 Strategic Communication: Does Client Advocate Mean Consumer Adversary? -- Case 7-A: Fyre Festival becomes Fyre Fraud -- Case 7-B: Through the glass darkly: Peloton, body shaming, and America's odd relationship with exercise -- Case 7-C: Weedvertising -- Case 7-D: Keeping up with the Kardashians' prescription drug choices -- Case 7-E: Between a (Kid) Rock and a hard place -- Case 7-F: Was that an Apple computer I saw? Product placement in the United States and abroad -- 8 Picture This: Technology, Visual Information, and Evolving Standards -- Case 8-A: New York Times ends political cartoons -- Case 8-B: Did you meme that? The unhoppy life of Pepe the Frog -- Case 8-C: Remember my fame: Digital necromancy and the immortal celebrity -- Case 8-D: Problem photos and public outcry -- Case 8-E: Above the fold: Balancing newsworthy photos with community standards -- Case 8-F: Horror in Soweto -- 9 Media Economics: The Deadline Meets the Bottom Line -- Case 9-A: Twitter's Trump problem -- Case 9-B: When investigative reporting is bad for business -- Case 9-C: And the Oscar rejects . . . Frida Mom.

Case 9-D: Who controls the local news? Sinclair Broadcast Group and "must-runs" -- Case 9-E: Contested interests, contested terrain: The New York Times Code of Ethics -- Case 9-F: Automated journalism: The rise of robot reporters -- 10 The Ethical Dimensions of Art and Entertainment -- Case 10-A: Documenting culture clash in American Factory -- Case 10-B: The Daily Show's one-client legal team -- Case 10-C: #OscarsSoWhite: Representation in the creative process -- Case 10-D: Get Out: When the horror is race -- Case 10-E: To die for: Making terrorists of gamers in Modern Warfare 2 -- Case 10-F: The Onion: Finding humor in mass shootings -- 11 Becoming a Moral Adult -- References -- Index.

Electronic reproduction

Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2022. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.

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