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Franklin Delano Roosevelt used radio fireside chats to connect with
millions of ordinary Americans. The highly articulate and telegenic
John F. Kennedy was dubbed the first TV president. Ronald Reagan,
the so-called Great Communicator, had a conversational way of
speaking to the common man. Bill Clinton left his mark on media
industries by championing and signing the landmark
Telecommunications Act of 1996 into law. Barack Obama was the first
social media presidential campaigner and president. And now there
is President Donald J. Trump. Because so much of what has made
Donald Trump's candidacy and presidency unconventional has been
about communication-how he has used Twitter to convey his political
messages and how the news media and voters have interpreted and
responded to his public words and persona-21 communication and
media scholars examine the Trump phenomenon in Communication in the
Age of Trump. This collection of essays and studies, suitable for
communication and political science students and scholars, covers
the 2016 presidential campaign and the first year of the Trump
presidency.
In the first systematic account of judicial rulings striking down
cyberbullying laws in the United States and Canada, Sympathy for
the Cyberbully offers an unapologetic defense of online
acid-tongued disparagers and youthful and adult sexters. In the
first decade of the 21st century, legitimate concerns about the
harmful effects of cyberbullying degenerated into a moral panic.
The most troubling aspect of the panic has been a spate of
censorship-the enactment of laws which breach long-standing
constitutional principles, by authorizing police to arrest and
juries to convict, and schools to suspend, individuals for engaging
in online expression that would be constitutionally protected had
it been communicated offline. These hastily drawn statutes
victimize harsh critics of elected officials, scholars, school
officials and faculty, distributors of constitutionally protected
pornography, adolescents "talking smack," and teens who engage in
the consensual exchange of nude images, even in states where teens
of a certain age enjoy the right to engage in sexual relations. The
victims' stories are told here. Sympathy for the Cyberbully is
suitable for undergraduate, graduate and law school courses in
media law, First Amendment law and free expression.
In the first systematic account of judicial rulings striking down
cyberbullying laws in the United States and Canada, Sympathy for
the Cyberbully offers an unapologetic defense of online
acid-tongued disparagers and youthful and adult sexters. In the
first decade of the 21st century, legitimate concerns about the
harmful effects of cyberbullying degenerated into a moral panic.
The most troubling aspect of the panic has been a spate of
censorship-the enactment of laws which breach long-standing
constitutional principles, by authorizing police to arrest and
juries to convict, and schools to suspend, individuals for engaging
in online expression that would be constitutionally protected had
it been communicated offline. These hastily drawn statutes
victimize harsh critics of elected officials, scholars, school
officials and faculty, distributors of constitutionally protected
pornography, adolescents "talking smack," and teens who engage in
the consensual exchange of nude images, even in states where teens
of a certain age enjoy the right to engage in sexual relations. The
victims' stories are told here. Sympathy for the Cyberbully is
suitable for undergraduate, graduate and law school courses in
media law, First Amendment law and free expression.
Digital media law is now the dynamic legal territory. Mass Media
Law: The Printing Press to the Internet is a textbook designed to
introduce students to the panoply of legal theories raised by the
Internet revolution as well as those supporting traditional media.
The book takes a historical approach beginning with the printing
press and the telegraph and proceeding to the digital technologies
of today, such as social media and search engines. Concepts such as
defamation, broadcast regulation, privacy, and free expression are
covered along with new media legal theories including Internet
exceptionalism, cyber libertarianism, and digital speech and
democratic culture. These are introduced to explain why traditional
theories such as First Amendment medium-specific analysis, common
carriage, and network neutrality are just as relevant today as they
were in the early twentieth century. In order to help readers
develop critical reasoning skills, each chapter opens with a highly
readable realworld vignette and goes on to identify and explain
legal doctrines and tests. Key passages from court opinions are
highlighted, and each chapter closes with a list of online media
law resources and thought-provoking questions, including legal
hypotheticals, to give readers a solid understanding of the area in
question. Mass Media Law is designed to be the main text and a
valuable resource for undergraduate and graduate courses covering
media, mass communication, free expression, and journalism law.
Robust, uninhibited, provocative, and even scurrilous criticism of
corporate media by the Fifth Estate-composed of private citizens
and watchdog and partisan groups of all stripes-is vital to the
functioning of the American democratic process. Hayes traces the
historical development of press criticism since the 1880s in each
of ten categories (muckrakers, journalism reviews, columnists and
authors, television press critics, press councils, advocacy groups,
scholars, ombudsmen, bloggers, and satirists) and provides case
studies of current outstanding examples of each category. Hayes's
case studies of recent press criticism campaigns that have, though
widely vilified as uncivil or marginalized as kooky, contributed
significantly to checking the pretensions of corporate media to an
unwholesome monopoly on journalistic truth include: BLJon Stewart,
The Daily Show, and The Colbert Report BLbloggers vs. CBS, CNN, and
The New York Times BLCarl Jensen and Project Censored BLBen
Bagdikian vs. media conglomerates Reed Irvine and Accuracy in Media
BLJeff Cohen and FAIR BLSteve Brill and Brill's Report Project for
Excellence in Journalism BLJay Rosen and Civic Journalism Press
Critics Are the Fifth Estate is the first serious book about the
press to treat Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert as important and
effective watchdogs of corporate media.
Franklin Delano Roosevelt used radio fireside chats to connect with
millions of ordinary Americans. The highly articulate and telegenic
John F. Kennedy was dubbed the first TV president. Ronald Reagan,
the so-called Great Communicator, had a conversational way of
speaking to the common man. Bill Clinton left his mark on media
industries by championing and signing the landmark
Telecommunications Act of 1996 into law. Barack Obama was the first
social media presidential campaigner and president. And now there
is President Donald J. Trump. Because so much of what has made
Donald Trump's candidacy and presidency unconventional has been
about communication-how he has used Twitter to convey his political
messages and how the news media and voters have interpreted and
responded to his public words and persona-21 communication and
media scholars examine the Trump phenomenon in Communication in the
Age of Trump. This collection of essays and studies, suitable for
communication and political science students and scholars, covers
the 2016 presidential campaign and the first year of the Trump
presidency.
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