Social Media Journalism
Panel Name
Social Media's Influence on Society
Location
Lecture Center 3B
Start Date
3-5-2019 3:15 PM
End Date
3-5-2019 4:15 PM
Presentation Type
Oral Presentation
Academic Major
Communication, Political Science
Abstract
Over the course of the past decade, journalism has become a career for the common man. This study observes how through the rise of social media platforms like Facebook, YouTube, and Instagram, influencers have become trustworthy news sources. Today, social media is the rising foremost way to produce and distribute news, if handled properly. We explore our thesis through comparison of social media being the go to platform for acquiring news when it was first introduced to society and how it has increased or decreased over time. A 2018 survey by the PEW research center found that more than 62% of Americans use social media to access their news. Our research displays explicitly how Facebook, YouTube, and Instagram have become more or less the precedent way of receiving news information. Social media influencers like Tomi Lahren, PewDiePie, and Shane Dawson have followings in the millions (among thousands of smaller yet still prominent individuals), which allows them to dominate portrayal of information. We discuss how social media influencers may play a role in how an audience receives news and also how they will interpret that information. We refute the belief that journalism is a dying career, it is just being reincarnated through social media and for many has become a steady and lucrative source of income.
Select Where This Work Originated From
Course assignment/project
First Faculty Advisor
Chang Sup Park
First Advisor Email
cpark2@albany.edy
First Advisor Department
Journalism
The work you will be presenting can best be described as
Finished or mostly finished by conference date
Social Media Journalism
Lecture Center 3B
Over the course of the past decade, journalism has become a career for the common man. This study observes how through the rise of social media platforms like Facebook, YouTube, and Instagram, influencers have become trustworthy news sources. Today, social media is the rising foremost way to produce and distribute news, if handled properly. We explore our thesis through comparison of social media being the go to platform for acquiring news when it was first introduced to society and how it has increased or decreased over time. A 2018 survey by the PEW research center found that more than 62% of Americans use social media to access their news. Our research displays explicitly how Facebook, YouTube, and Instagram have become more or less the precedent way of receiving news information. Social media influencers like Tomi Lahren, PewDiePie, and Shane Dawson have followings in the millions (among thousands of smaller yet still prominent individuals), which allows them to dominate portrayal of information. We discuss how social media influencers may play a role in how an audience receives news and also how they will interpret that information. We refute the belief that journalism is a dying career, it is just being reincarnated through social media and for many has become a steady and lucrative source of income.