ABSTRACT

First published in 1980, More Bad News is the Second Volume in the research findings of the Glasgow University Media Group. It develops the analytic findings and methods of the first volume Bad News through a series of Case Studies of Television News Coverage, and argues that much of what passes as balanced and factual news reporting is produced from a highly partial viewpoint.

Focusing on the British economy in crisis, and its thematic linkage with the Social Contract during the first four months of 1975, the book deals with three main levels of activity: the story, the language and the visuals. As the book unpacks each level of routine news coverage a picture emerges which has the surface appearance of neutrality and balance but is in fact highly partial and restricted

part |1 pages

Part I Reporting the Economic Crisis and the Social Contract: A Case Study

chapter 1|18 pages

Introduction: The Economic Background

chapter 2|17 pages

Wages and Prices Figures

chapter 3|13 pages

From Diagnosis to Prescription

chapter 5|18 pages

‘Who Gets On?’: Conclusion

part |1 pages

Part II Hear It This Way

chapter 6|13 pages

News Ideology: Neutrality and Naturalism

chapter 7|20 pages

Assembling the News Text

part |1 pages

Part III See It This Way

chapter 9|32 pages

Measuring the Visuals

chapter 10|24 pages

Halting the Flow

chapter 11|45 pages

‘Good Evening’

chapter 12|22 pages

Still Life