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AP U.S. Government & Politics
Chapter 12
41
History
10th Grade
12/03/2007

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Cards

Term
What does the term "gatekeeper" mean?
Definition
Media influences what subjects become national poltical issues, and for how long they will last.
Term
What is a blog?
Definition
Series, or log, of discussion items on a page of the World Wide Web.
Term
What does the term scorekeeper mean?
Definition
National media keeps track of and help make political reputations.
Term
Near v. Minnesota
Definition
Freedom of the press applies to state governments, so that they cannot impose prior restraint on newspapers.
Term
New York Times v. Sullivan
Definition
Public officials may not win a libel suit unless they can prove that the statement was made knowing to be false or with reckless disregard of its truth.
Term
Miami Herald v. Tornillo
Definition
A newspaper cannot be rquired to give someone a right to reply to one if its stories.
Term
What is a trial balloon?
Definition
Information leaked to the media to test public reaction to a possible policy.
Term
What is loaded language?
Definition
Words that imply a value judgement, used to persuade a reader without having made a serious argument.
Term
Politicians have become more heavily dependent on the media as ...
Definition
Political party organizations have declined.
Term
The federalists created which newspaper?
Definition
The Gazette of the United States.
Term
The Antifederalists created which newspaper?
Definition
The National Gazette.
Term
The development of the _______________ enabled publishers to print thousands of copies of a newspaper cheaply and quickly.
Definition
High-speed rotary press.
Term
The invention of the ______ in the 1840s meant that news from Washington could be flashed to other cities almost instantly.
Definition
Telegraph.
Term
In 1860 the _________ was established.
Definition
Government Printing Office.
Term
A way to attract a large readership.
Definition
Sensationalism: violence, romance, patriotism, exposes of the government, politics, business, & society.
Term
Newspaper space is expensive.
Definition
False.
Term
What do the majority of todays magazines focus on?
Definition
Popular entertainment and leisure activities.
Term
Radio came in to the national scene in the ______ television in the late ________.
Definition
1920s, 1940s respectively.
Term
What is the newest source of electronic news?
Definition
Internet.
Term
No one can ban, regulate, keep facts, opinions, and nonsense off the internet.
Definition
True.
Term
Newspapers unlike radio and television are competitive.
Definition
False, the opposite is true.
Term
What are the political affiliations of most writers for the national press?
Definition
Liberal.
Term
There has been a steep incline in the numbers of daily newspapers that serve large communities.
Definition
False, in fact it has been a steep decline.
Term
The least competitive media outlets are almost entirely free from what?
Definition
Government regulations.
Term
Which media outlets need no license to publish?
Definition
Magazines and newspapers.
Term
What is a market?
Definition
An area easily reached by tv signals.
Term
A much higher percentage of Senate than of House candidates use television ads.
Definition
False.
Term
Very few _____ newspapers have a national audience.
Definition
Conservative.
Term
When was radio and tv coverage allowed on the Senate floor?
Definition
1978.
Term
American government in the leakiest in the world.
Definition
True.
Term
What causes leaks in the government?
Definition
Seperate institutions all sharing and competing for the power, leaking stories to make other branches look bad.
Term
A radio or video clip of someone speaking.
Definition
Soundbite.
Term
An FCC rule that if a broadcaster sells time to one candidate, it must sell equal time to other candidates.
Definition
Equal time rule.
Term
Media stories about events that, though public, are not regularly covered by reporters.
Definition
Feature stories.
Term
Media stories about events that a regularly covered by reporters.
Definition
Routine stories.
Term
Media stories about events that are usually not made public.
Definition
Insider stories.
Term
The tendency of the national media to be suspicious of officials and eagar to reveal unflattering stories about them.
Definition
Adversial press.
Term
A public official's statement to a reporter that is given on condition that the official not be named.
Definition
Background.
Term
The reporter can quote the official by name.
Definition
On the record.
Term
What the official says can be used but not attributed to anybody, even an anonymous source.
Definition
Deep background.
Term
What the official says may not be used.
Definition
Off the record.
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