News and Media Books
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I love itReview Date: 1999-09-26


HistoricalReview Date: 2007-08-17

Used price: $38.60

Operation of Political JournalistsReview Date: 2003-04-10
This book, by an experienced journalist and author, looks at the workings of the press gallery, how the gallery decides which stories to pursue, which to ignore, and the working relationships which develop between the journalists themselves and the people (politicians and their staff) on whom the journalists report.
Gallery operations, deadlines and beliefs shape the news that is published for public consumption.
Although specific to Australia, I imagine that similar situations exist in other countries, particularly the U.S. and the UK.


Fine study of the mediaReview Date: 2008-04-25
Commercial forces are the main obstacle to truth-telling journalism. The owners cut costs by cutting staff and local news suppliers, by running cheap stories, choosing safe facts and ideas, avoiding upsetting the powerful, giving both sides of the story (unless it's the official story), giving the readers what they want to believe, and going with moral panics.
He cites a Cardiff University study of four quality papers which found that 60% of their home news stories were wholly from wire agencies, mainly the Press Association, or PR material, 20% partially so, 8% from unknown sources, and just 12% generated by reporters. The Press Association reports only what is said, it has no time to check whether it is true. There are now more PR people, 47,800, than journalists, 45,000.
News websites run by media firms recycle 50% of their stories from the two international wire agencies, Associated Press and Reuters; those run by internet firms recycle 85% of their stories from those two. On a typical day, Google News offered `14,000' stories - actually retelling just 24 events.
The government has 1,500 press officers, issues 20,000 press releases a year, and also spends millions more of our money on PR firms. The Foreign Office spends £600 million a year on `public diplomacy'. The CIA spent $265 million on `information operations' in 1978 alone, more than the world's three biggest news agencies together. It focuses its efforts on the New York Times, CBS, Newsweek and Time.
Davies notes the non-stories - bin Laden before 9/11, 80% of world's people living below the poverty line, poverty and inequality surging since the 1980s, wars in the Ivory Coast, Liberia, Congo and Nepal, the global water shortage, and the vast expansion of tax havens (a third of the world's GDP goes through them).
He notes how the scare about heroin, which is not a poison, led to the rise of the black market and the consequent `war' on drugs, which now costs the USA $49 billion a year. In Britain, every pound the state spends on prohibition stimulates £4 worth of crime. Again, the nuclear power scare is based on lies: Chernobyl killed just 56 people (World Health Organisation figure), not the six million that Greenpeace's Russian representative claimed.
Finally, Davies shows how Rupert Murdoch and Andrew Neil destroyed the Sunday Times and its Insight team, how the Observer suppressed stories that disproved the government's claims about WMD and how Paul Dacre rules the Daily Mail through fear.

Used price: $0.01

AWESOME! Funny, heartfelt- you have to read this book.Review Date: 2003-04-28

Used price: $0.01

Great intro to chapter booksReview Date: 2007-01-18
It's hard for a printed book to capture the quirky humor of the show, but the writers did a good job in adaptation. All the funny parts of the TV episode are there, though it certainly helps to have seen the episode to appreciate the humor. Fortunately, whoever's responsible for the book's layout did a great job of including a judicious amount of stills and images. So even if you haven't seen the episode, you still get a nice visual representation of it.
And the book is written just long enough and with just enough five-dollar words to present a challenge to a 5-year old, but not so tough that reading becomes a frustration or the child is asking you for help on every other word.
I plan on buying all future chapter books in this series, or at least until my son's interest in the show starts to wane or he is no longer challenged by the reading level.

Used price: $21.99

A Must-read for all men and women with the 'scientific tempeReview Date: 2004-09-26
Robin Baker does a marvellous job of reviewing, analysing and dissecting the scientific studies on some of the really crucial issues facing us today. And he does it with an easy smile, and no sign of ideological biases of any kind.
This books is fun to read, even though the topics are difficult. I could not put the book down, and recommend it to everyone I know (and now,. even to those I don't!)

Used price: $10.90

Rerelease Improves Upon Great StoryReview Date: 2004-01-17
One thing I really like about this rerelease is that a number of the recent "Franklin" book releases have included Franklin's sister Harriet in stories she wasn't in before, but this one correctly preserves the timeline of the series. Everything is how it should be.


Excellent Adaptation of "Back to School with Franklin"Review Date: 2008-01-17
The new teacher is Ms. Koala. She's definitely different, very different. She uses a lot of seemingly strange expressions when speaking, such as "fair dinkum." But it turns out that Ms. Koala is a bit nervous about being their replacement teacher, just as they're nervous about meeting her. Franklin comes with a great idea to make her feel better.
A nice adaptation of the special "Back to School with Franklin." The book necessary eliminates all of the special's sideplots, such as Harriet & Kit, as well as Ms. Koala setting up a school soccer team. But this version of the story really works well, and will satisfy readers.

Used price: $19.69

Franklin Celebrates? Celebrate Franklin! :)Review Date: 2005-12-15
Goose sends Franklin an invitation for a Migration Eve party. Franklin doesn't know anything about the holiday, but is excited to be invited to a party. He asks Mr. Owl about the holiday, but when Mr. Owl tells him that there will be special foods and a special dance, Franklin is kind of scared to go to the party. However, when his Mom says that she's counting him to deliver a blueberry pie to the party, it seems there's no way. Franklin goes to the party and shares in a very special event, one that both he and Goose will remember.
This is one of the strongest stories from the sixth season of the show and it makes for a great book. The characters and general look in the book is that of the TV show, but there are nice visual details and illustrations as well. Naturally, some things are left out or changed a bit, but they really did a good job on this one.
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