Topic: Project for Excellence in Journalism
Newspapers and other "traditional media" still generate the bulk of news that gets to US consumers despite the rising importance of online media, according to a study released Monday. The report by the Pew Research Center's Project for Excellence in Journalism, based on a study of media in Baltimore, Maryland, found that 95 percent of stories with "new information ...
Coverage of gay marriage continues to dominate the conversation online but is being roundly ignored by traditional offline media sources, according to newly released New Media Index figures by the Pew Research Center's Project for Excellence in Journalism.
The index found ...
US newspapers are in a state "perilously close to free fall" and time is running short for them to find a business model and reinvent themselves, according to a study released on Monday. The Pew Research Center?s Project for Excellence in Journalism said its 2009 report on the State of the News Media was the "bleakest" it has issued ...
The many and deepening cuts at newspapers across the country are starting to take a toll on their content, according to a study being released Monday. The challenge newspapers must meet immediately is to find more revenue on the Internet, according to the Project for Excellence in Journalism's study ...
