Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 208
Trim: 6¼ x 9¼
978-0-7425-2505-4 • Hardback • September 2003 • $120.00 • (£92.00)
978-0-7425-2506-1 • Paperback • September 2003 • $47.00 • (£36.00)
978-0-7425-7218-8 • eBook • September 2003 • $44.50 • (£35.00)
Robert Thompson is an award-winning reporter/anchor with fifteen years of on-air experience. Cindy Malone is an Emmy awardDwinning news producer, co-owner of the production company Malone Media Group, and a former television news reporter and anchor.
Chapter 1 Introduction
Chapter 2 1 TV News: The Myth and the Reality
Chapter 3 2 You've Got the Job, What Do You Do Now?
Chapter 4 3 Your First Day
Chapter 5 4 Putting It All Together: Cast and Crew
Chapter 6 5 Newsroom Survival Guide
Chapter 7 6 The Business of News
Chapter 8 7 Crossing the Line
Chapter 9 8 One-Man Bands
Chapter 10 9 The Story
Chapter 11 10 Where to Go, What to Do, Who to Call?
Chapter 12 11 Making Deadlines
Chapter 13 12 Writing Tips
Chapter 14 13 Into Practice
Chapter 15 14 News Quiz: Test Your Knowledge of History, Recent Events, and People
Chapter 16 15 Worst-Case Scenarios
Chapter 17 16 Amateur Errors
Chapter 18 17 Getting the Job
Chapter 19 18 Wrap-Up
Chapter 20 Appendix: Going Online
Chapter 21 News Glossary
I will be using the book as a text in my spring semester Electronic News Gathering and Production class . . . I really like the 'real' language of the authors. I believe it will be an appropriate take-along text for my students who, after my course, willbe one course away from emerging in the professional world....
— Dan Keever
The Broadcast Journalism Handbook is truly more than a newsroom survival guide—it's a survival guide for the profession of broadcast journalism. In plain language and with plenty of common sense, it leads the student through the steps of getting that first job and keeping it, what counts in the newsroom, how to put stories together, and how to do it all responsibly and ethically....
— Teresa Ponte
This book has an insider's view on the workings of the newsroom and shows the specific demands of television news, featuring many anecdotes compiled by working journalists. If you want to be a broadcast news journalist, you should read this to erase any doubt about entering the field....
— Patricia Hastings
This is a very accessible, practical guide for beginning TV news professionals. I found myself saying 'yes' or nodding in agreement as I read! It presents many realities of TV news in frank, straightforward terms—you can tell it's written by people who have been there. This book would be great to have in a senior-level class, when some people are getting ready for TV careers and others are still wondering if that's the job for them....
— Lee Hood
Whew! If I'd read this book 25 years ago I may have ended up taking that insurance job! The Broadcast Journalism Handbook does an outstanding job letting news business 'newbies' know what to expect when they get that coveted first job. If this includes you, read this book and get a running start into a wild and wonderful career....
— Jim Benemann