Media ethics /

"Is a political candidate's past personal life fodder for the front page? If a child commits murder, should the offender's name be released? If a CD by a top recording artist has strongly antisocial lyrics, should the record label consider its impact on kids? News professionals and ex...

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Bibliographic Details
Corporate Authors: Films for the Humanities (Firm), McGraw-Hill Companies. College Division, Knowledge TV (Television network)
Other Authors: Stone, David P., Hartley, David (Narrator), Rubinstein, Geoffrey
Format: Video DVD
Language:English
Published: Princeton, NJ : Films for the Humanities & Sciences, [1998]
Series:Media power (DVD videodiscs)
Subjects:
Description
Summary:"Is a political candidate's past personal life fodder for the front page? If a child commits murder, should the offender's name be released? If a CD by a top recording artist has strongly antisocial lyrics, should the record label consider its impact on kids? News professionals and executives from NBC, CBS, Capitol-EMI Records, and Mercury Records speak out about the ethical dilemmas their industries face. The program also examines the case of Janet Cooke, who wrote a Pulitzer Prize-winning but fraudulent story about an 8-year-old heroin addict in 1981. The need for honesty and fairness, the subtle pressure of commercial interests, and the lure of sensationalism are discussed in this investigation of the pressures and circumstances that make up the context of media ethics"--Container.
Item Description:"Produced in cooperation with the College Division of the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. and Knowledge TV."
Videodisc release of a program originally produced as part of the telecourse, Media waves : an introduction to mass communication.
Videorecording.
Physical Description:1 DVD-video (28 min.) : sound, color ; 4 3/4 in.
Format:DVD.
Production Credits:Editors, Anthony Cimino ... [et al.] ; composer, David Anthony ; instructional writer/advisor, Geoffrey Rubinstein.