2016
DOI: 10.15847/obsobs1042016940
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Goodbye politics, hello lifestyle Changing news topics in tabloid, quality and local newspaper websites in the U.K. and Sweden from 2002 to 2012

Abstract: Although considerable efforts have studied online news, studies so far have not investigated how the actual news topics are affected by digitalization in general, if at all, or compared them to different media constructs. Instead, changes in content are assumed or illustrated anecdotally rather than systematically assessed. This empirical study, covering Swedish and UK news sites within tabloid, quality morning, and local/regional varieties between 2002 and 2012, shows that there is a tabloidization effect in … Show more

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Cited by 13 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…Since the debate initially refers to the adaption of tabloid news standards, analyses therefore traditionally focus on newspapers (Esser 1999;Lefkowitz 2018;Magin 2019). However, research has extended to other types of media such as television (e.g., Donsbach and Büttner 2005;Grabe et al 2001;Vettehen et al 2008), online media outlets (Gran 2015;Karlsson 2016) and even social media (Lischka and Werning 2017;Steiner 2016) or cross-media (Reinemann et al 2016).…”
Section: Content-related or Stylistic Reporting Stylesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Since the debate initially refers to the adaption of tabloid news standards, analyses therefore traditionally focus on newspapers (Esser 1999;Lefkowitz 2018;Magin 2019). However, research has extended to other types of media such as television (e.g., Donsbach and Büttner 2005;Grabe et al 2001;Vettehen et al 2008), online media outlets (Gran 2015;Karlsson 2016) and even social media (Lischka and Werning 2017;Steiner 2016) or cross-media (Reinemann et al 2016).…”
Section: Content-related or Stylistic Reporting Stylesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…So far, studies on news softening and tabloidization focus on the comparison of (elite and popular) newspapers (e.g., Lefkowitz, 2018) or (public service and commercial) TV newscasts (e.g., Donsbach & Büttner, 2005). More recent studies also take online media into account (e.g., Karlsson, 2016) or compare social media platforms such as Facebook with offline and/or online media (e.g., Lischka & Werning, 2017;Magin et al, in press).…”
Section: Field Of Application/theoretical Foundationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Soft news has often been used as a derogatory term and implies an emotional, sensational, and personality-centered journalism that is incompatible with established ideals of what constitutes high-quality or even real journalism (Patterson, 2000; Plasser, 2005). As such, soft news also often appears in scholarly discussions on commercialization, tabloidization, and infotainment, denoting a dumbing-down type of journalism that does not meet the informational needs necessary for a sound democracy (Anderson and Ward, 2007; Karlsson, 2016; Otto et al, 2017). However, romanticizing hard news is problematic, not only because soft forms of journalism such as culture, lifestyle, and service journalism can contribute alternative angles on and interpretations of current events that hard news does not cover (Widholm et al, 2019; Fürsich, 2012; Örnebring and Jönsson, 2004), but also because genres and news styles are increasingly mixed and hybridized in the current era of networked journalism and multi-platform media production (Deuze and Witschge, 2018; Hermida and Young, 2016).…”
Section: The Boundaries Of Hard and Soft Newsmentioning
confidence: 99%