Hand Out - Presentation
Hand Out - Presentation
Hand Out - Presentation
consume online?
(A presentation by Kayleigh Khoodabux)
According to statistics in the U.S Adults receive most of their news…
43% Facebook
21% YouTube
12% Twitter
8% Instagram
5% Reddit
5% Snapchat
At least 50% of people who use the internet said that they found their
latest news through their social media feed before they even hear it on
the on the News. This then leads to people seeing it on their feed and
then to learn more they go onto the News websites to find at more.
Now there has been a 57% increase on traffic on the News websites
that has been referred from social media. This has also led to a
decrease in reading other articles online. As articles need to be liked
to be shared several times before it can be put on other feed, whereas
social media platforms have control of what you do see and what you
don’t see. But the problem with this is that because good articles are
being read and shared less it means that fake news compete for more
attention and the readers will not always check if the factual sources
are correct. Making fake news to spread more than the truth.
Buzzfeed is an example of a popular social platform with 17.2
subscribers. For content to appear it needs to be shareable and likable,
meaning most of the time articles are overly exaggerated. And for
brands to be able to compete with big social platforms they will pay to
appear in News feed to get attention.
Sub-Editors: They give the end product, they edit stories, check the
factual correctness and check the length and ensures that the story
written meets the criteria and style of the media organization. They
will also write headlines and captions for photographs and train
people to be able to complete and work well.
Editors: They oversee what gets published and released, their job is to
guide the journalists on what they write about as long as they agree
and have what they want out of the story.
43% Facebook
21% YouTube
12% Twitter
8% Instagram
5% Reddit
5% Snapchat