2012
DOI: 10.4135/9781446288597
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Magazine Journalism

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Cited by 31 publications
(41 citation statements)
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“…Toimittajien arvioissa esimerkiksi tarinoiden kertominen on tehtävänä mennyt yleisön valistamisen (50 %) ohitse. Selkeimmin tehtävänsä tarinankertojiksi mielsivät aikakauslehtijournalistit, joiden työ onkin nähty edelläkävijänä journalismin tarinallisuuden kehityksessä (Töyry 2009;Holmes & Nice 2012).…”
Section: Vähiten Vaikutustaunclassified
“…Toimittajien arvioissa esimerkiksi tarinoiden kertominen on tehtävänä mennyt yleisön valistamisen (50 %) ohitse. Selkeimmin tehtävänsä tarinankertojiksi mielsivät aikakauslehtijournalistit, joiden työ onkin nähty edelläkävijänä journalismin tarinallisuuden kehityksessä (Töyry 2009;Holmes & Nice 2012).…”
Section: Vähiten Vaikutustaunclassified
“…Online advertising can be used in new and innovative ways including via click-throughs, deep linking and developing shopping partners (Holmes and Nice, 2012).…”
Section: Product Innovation At the Elle Uk: New Platforms And New Busmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Duffy (2013: 117) argues that there is an "increasingly commercial nature of magazines' digital extensions" with new platforms largely being instrumentalised for commercial purposes as evidence of brand-reach across multiple platforms. This Nice, 2012). As the Group Publishing Director at Hearst Magazines UK Meribeth Parker explained, "invariably you are always going to be stronger if you have got a little editorial 'fairy dust' as we call it sprinkled on top".…”
Section: Content-based Innovation At Elle Uk: New Content Trendsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The common belief, fuelled by the media industry itself and its managers, is that journalism was changed primarily by the off-line to online transition (the technological determinism explanation). However, research on journalists and their working conditions (Deuze 2007;Deuze and Lewis 2016;Deuze and Witchsge 2016;IFJ 2011;Holmes and Nice 2012) yields more refined explanations related to political, economic and social factors that ultimately affect journalism, leading to an end of journalism 'as it is' (for a detailed discussion, see Deuze 2007, 141-170), and to the start of the new condition of 'becoming' (Deuze and Witchsge 2016). Following Deuze (2007), Deuze and Lewis (2013) and Mosco and McKercher (2008), I have focused previously on the changing working conditions of journalists in the digital environment.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%