Vol. 41

These issues are available through Communication and Mass Media Complete on EBSCOHost.

Vol. 41, Issue 1
Winter 2024

Editor’s Note
Pamela E. Walck

ARTICLES

“A Good Honest Journeyman Newspapering:” Billboard’s Lee Zhito Exposes Editorializing at George A. Richards’s “Station of the Stars”
Madeleine Liseblad and Gregory Pitts

A 1948 journalistic scoop informed the public and broadcast regulators about misconduct on the airwaves. The investigation by Lee Zhito established Billboard—known for music coverage and song charts—as a legitimate journalism voice in the radio industry. Zhito exposed news slanting and editorializing by station owner George A. Richards, who expressed to staff his abhorrence of Blacks, Jews, Communists, and Democrats—especially Franklin D. Roosevelt. The Mayflower doctrine banned editorializing and advocated public service, yet Richards’s views shaped news and commentary airing on KMPC in Los Angeles, WJR in Detroit, and WGAR in Cleveland. Zhito’s exposé produced national ramifications, led to the first major FCC case addressing news slanting and broadcast licensee obligations, generated 18,000 transcript pages and one of the FCC legal department’s most strongly worded documents affirming broadcaster public service. Journalists revealing secret practices can have a direct impact, pressuring industry and regulators to be more serious about upholding responsibilities.

Spinning Hate: Mississippi’s Post-Brown PR Offensive and the Secret Campaign Against ‘Agitators,’ 1956-1960
Edgar Simpson

After the US Supreme Court’s Brown vs. Board of Education ruling in 1954, the Mississippi Legislature approved several laws designed to fight integration and federalize civil rights. Among the legislation was the creation of the state Sovereignty Commission, which saw preserving white supremacy as good public policy. This study examines the efforts of the agency’s first public relations director to carry out that mission through both standard public relations practices and far more nefarious methods of coercion and intimidation against those perceived as threats to segregation.

“Too Infernally Scientific”: John Wesley Powell and News Framing of Climate Policy in the Nineteenth-Century Press
Ken J. Ward and Aaron Atkins  (Free Access Article)

In 1890, John Wesley Powell launched a plan to reshape land use policies in the western United States. His proposal, grounded in science, sought to protect vulnerable water rights and garnered US press attention for eight months. Using qualitative historical analysis combined with quantitative content analysis to examine the story frames used by 281 newspapers in some 798 articles covering the debate over Powell’s proposal, this study fills a conspicuous gap in researchers’ understandings of the history of climate coverage in the US. It discovers that news coverage overwhelmingly focused on a political conflict frame that deemphasized the substance both of Powell’s proposal and the alternatives offered by his opponents. Finally, it illustrates the usefulness of applying contemporary frames to historical questions and highlights the partisan sectional identity dominant in the American West in the 1890s.

Tel Ra Productions: The Unknown Story of a Philadelphia Production Company That Captured Americans’s Passion for Sports on Film in the Post-WWII Era
Daniel Marshall Haygood

During commercial television’s early years, the nation’s four networks initially featured an extensive offering of sports programming on prime-time schedules. The networks then replaced sports with entertainment programs in these prime slots, relegating sports to weekends. Independent sports producers saw this deemphasis of athletics as an opportunity. Philadelphia-based Tel Ra Productions emerged as the leading producer of syndicated sports programming, beginning in the late 1940s. Its primary program was TeleSports Digest, a thirty-minute weekly show that featured a variety of sporting events. The program comprised the most extensive offerings of sports available, featuring some of the most valuable American sports properties, including NFL football, college basketball, professional baseball, and non-traditional sports, and unique competitive activities. Ultimately, Tel Ra Productions became the most prolific producer of US sports films from 1948 to 1966, appealing to the country’s seemingly limitless appetite for athletics.

CONVERSATIONS ON JOURNALISM HISTORY

A Conversation with Pushpa Kamal Dahal, Prime Minister of Nepal
Interview by Nicholas Hirshon

BOOK REVIEWS

Magazine
Sharon Bloyd-Peshkin

Righting the American Dream: How the Media Mainstreamed Reagan’s Evangelical Vision
Cari S. Babitzke

Journalism in the Civil War Era
William E. Huntzicker

Live From The Underground: A History of College Radio
Jason Lee Guthrie

24/7 Politics: Cable Television and the Fragmenting of America from Watergate to Fox News
John McMurria

Get the Damn Story: Homer Bigart and the Great Age of American Newspapers
Thomas R. Schmidt

Children, War & Propaganda
Charles Sorrie

DIGITAL MEDIA REVIEWS

The Magnus Archivehttps://rustyquill.com/show/the-magnus-archives/
Hayley McCullough

Diving into the Belgian Press: BelgicaPress, BelgicaPeriodicals and CAMille
Alexia Vidalenche

Brazilian Digital Hemeroteca: Collection of Newspapers and Magazines from the National Library
Otávio Daros

PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS

Influencing the Future by Interrogating the Past
Mike Conway

ENDNOTES
Endnotes.

Vol. 41, Issue 2
Spring 2024

Editor’s Note
Pamela E. Walck

ARTICLES

Winning Women’s Votes: Dotty Lynch and the Role of Gender in American Political Polling
Wendy Melillo

As the chief pollster for Gary Hart’s 1984 race for the Oval Office, Dorothea “Dotty” Lynch became the first female pollster to head the polling unit for a presidential campaign. Lynch’s work reconstructed how the field of political consulting regarded the role of women in elections by making women’s issues a central focus of a US presidential candidate’s campaign strategy, and by actively recruiting more women to work on presidential campaigns. Her work is also significant for the contribution she made to help explain why the gender gap played a critical role in American politics and elections.

#HandsUpDontShoot: Studying Coverage of Ferguson as a ‘Critical Incident’ from Journalism’s Recent Past
Patrick Walters

For seventy years, gatekeeping theory has described how news sources, news institutions, and audiences impact the way information is distributed and consumed through mass media. But when a Black teenager, Michael Brown, was fatally shot by police in Ferguson, Missouri, citizen accounts of him having his “hands up” quickly spread on social media, forcing journalists to acknowledge both the circumstances of the shooting and the role of social media in shaping the narrative. This historical study of the “recent past” considers how Brown’s shooting death served as a “critical incident” that forced journalists to reevaluate long-held practices in the face of citizen journalism on social media. Using textual analysis, this study examines local and national news coverage of the shooting and resulting protests, as well as subsequent investigations over the following weeks and months; it draws on content from the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, New York Times, and other outlets, as well as Twitter posts from citizens. The study, which places Ferguson in the historical context of breaking news coverage, finds social media narratives initially impacted the shape of news coverage, but over time journalists ultimately reverted to their traditional reliance on official sources.

Discovering the Arizona Republican Newspaper, 1890-1900: Yellow Journalism in America’s Territorial Press
Patti Piburn

Yellow journalism is widely believed to have grown out of a circulation battle between Joseph Pulitzer and William Hearst in the 1890s. Most scholarship on its inception has been confined to newspapers in large Eastern cities. To date, little study of the period’s journalism has investigated whether, and to what degree, elements of yellow journalism were practiced by newspapers in Western US states and territories. This examination of the Arizona Republican in the 1890s shows yellow journalism was not confined to the East where it was incubated; in territorial Arizona, yellow journalism flourished. Needing to attract readers in a competitive newspaper market with a growing population, the newspaper did so with large headlines, scurrilous reporting, attention-grabbing news, and illustrations. Beyond the Eastern United States, the same force which brought on yellow journalism—publishers’ needs to attract huge readerships—fueled the practice on America’s territorial frontier in the Arizona Republican.

A Socially Responsible Trade: An Analysis of Ethical Discourse in Editor & Publisher, 1930-1934
Max Fuller

In the 1930s, the pages of Editor & Publisher were filled with nuanced stories revealing the many ethical challenges facing journalism amid the economic woes of the Great Depression, increased public scrutiny over news, and the influence of New Deal policies on journalistic practices in the US. Industry insiders discussed everything from how to best report criminal activities and sports to how to best write about the nation’s economic plight all while keeping the public’s interest in mind. Analysis of 265 E&P issues, published between 1930 and 1934, found that reporters of the day were highly concerned about ethics in the professional practice of journalism during a time when the newspaper industry faced challenges such as outside scrutiny, governmental critique, and diminished public support. It will be argued that these ethical conversations among journalists promoted functions of a press system outlined by the Social Responsibility Theory of the Press more than a decade before its adoption by the Hutchins Commission in 1947.

ESSAY

Reimagining and Revolutionizing Media History Research: Problems and Possibilities
Bailey Dick

Organizations like the American Journalism Historians Association, publications like American Journalism, and many individual scholars have begun efforts to make media history more diverse, equitable, and inclusive. Yet despite these group and individual efforts, methodological approaches remain tied to systems and norms that are inherently inequitable. This essay argues for a paradigm shift in how media history research is done by delineating methodological hurdles faced by one researcher, discussion of the problems media historians face, and an acknowledgment of the work being done to make the field more equitable.

BOOK REVIEWS

The Times: How the Newspaper of Record Survived Scandal, Scorn, and the Transformation of Journalism
Matthew Pressman

Drawing Liberalism: Herblock’s Political Cartoons in Postwar America
Gwyneth Mellinger

Last Paper Standing: A Century of Competition Between the Denver Post and the Rocky Mountain News
Nicholas Hirshon

Birddogs and Tough Old Broads: Women Journalists of Mississippi and a Century of State Politics, 1880s–1980s
Wayne Dawkins

DIGITAL MEDIA REVIEW

The Greatest Night in Pop
Zakiya Moses

ENDNOTES
Endnotes.

Vol. 41, Issue 3
Summer 2024

Editor’s Note

ARTICLES

Before the Environment Was News: Outdoor Writers and the Boundaries of Journalism
Suzannah Evans Comfort

Outdoor writing is a little respected and often forgotten genre of American newsmaking. Widely popular in the early to middle twentieth century, outdoor journalists presented a blend of factuality with personal narrative and advocacy for environmental preservation as they told stories of fishing, hunting, and the outdoors more broadly in columns tucked away in the sports section. Outdoor columns were the single most consistent source of environmental newsmaking in US newspapers until the late 1960s, when news organizations started assigning journalists working in the news section to the environmental beat. But because outdoor columnists violated norms of twentieth century newsmaking by including advocacy and personal narrative in their columns, their contributions have been overlooked. This study, which draws on the organizational archives of the Outdoor Writers Association of America, demonstrates that outdoor writers were deeply engaged with the concept of “news” even from their position as delegitimized actors within the news ecosystem. As a result, an historic account of the outdoor writing profession provides a fruitful site of inquiry to examine norms of journalism, boundaries of the field, legitimacy, and ultimately power.

Women’s Entrée into Advertising Through the Brand Test Kitchen
Lisa Mullikin Parcell & Paul Myers

As branded food products spread in the early 1900s, advertisers began speaking directly to women shoppers. Adopting a women-advertising-to-women approach, national brands and advertising agencies hired home economics professionals and charged them with creating test kitchens to develop and test recipes, write advertising copy, correspond with consumers, and test products. They became the face and voice of brands, providing women entrée into the male-dominated advertising profession. These professional women brought an understanding of the needs of the housewife, knowledge of the emerging fields of dietetics and home economics, and a scientific approach to solving “home problems.” Brand test kitchens became a symbol of trust, signifying that the product was reliable, pure, and economical. Today major food brands such as Kraft, Heinz, General Mills, and Kellogg’s still maintain test kitchens to meet consumer needs, educate consumers on proper product use, and produce new branded recipes.

“Old-Time Negroes”: Nostalgic Ex-Slave Narratives in New York Newspapers of the Gilded Age
Lorraine Ahearn

In the field of social memory of slavery, a growing body of scholarship on the Jim Crow North has complicated the notion of white supremacy as a specifically Southern ideology, locating what historians view as a “missing link” in the history of race in America. This study examines a corollary gap in American journalism history—the role that white Northern newspapers played a generation after Emancipation in softening white memory of slavery and hardening discourse toward African Americans. This article applies narrative analysis to sample five large-circulation white New York City newspapers from 1889 to 1910, along with a contemporary Black city newspaper. The study concludes that white newspapers, by perpetuating racist tropes upstreamed from literature, cultivated Jim Crow ideology beyond the former Confederacy. The findings shed light on the timeline of Black Americans’ struggle for mass media representation and demonstrate journalism’s intertextual role in shaping social memory.

“Comforting the Afflicted”: How a Small Number of Journalists Fought for Japanese Americans During the Internment
Reed Smith

Historians have documented that newspaper editorials and radio commentaries played a role in turning public opinion against Japanese Americans and pressured President Franklin D. Roosevelt into interning them during World War II. But what has been overlooked were the efforts of a few reporters who fought to reverse journalistic and public opinion regarding the government-sanctioned, racially-inspired injustice. This study documents the work of the unsung journalists—some who addressed a limited forum and others with a national audience—who sought to end the internments and secure restoration of Japanese Americans’s civil rights. By doing so, these reporters fulfilled one of the press’s most sacred responsibilities to “comfort the afflicted and afflict the comfortable.” Although these journalists failed to secure freedom for the internees during the war years—these reporters eventually helped restore the dignity and constitutional rights of Japanese Americans by speaking on their behalf.

BOOK REVIEWS
The Magnificent Reverend Peter Thomas Stanford, Transatlantic Reformer and Race Man
edited by Barbara McCaskill and Sidonia Serafini with the Rev. Paul Walker, University of Georgia Press, 2020, 264 pp.

Cathy M. Jackson


How America Gets the News: A History of U.S. Journalism
Ford Risley and Ashley Walter, Rowman and Littlefield, 2024, 238 pp.

Jason Lee Guthrie


Published by the Author: Self-publication in Nineteenth-Century African American Literature
by Bryan Sinche, University of North Carolina Press, 2024, 258 pp.

Maurine H. Beasley


American Literary Misfits: The Alternative Democracies of Mid-Nineteenth-Century Print Cultures
by D. Berton Emerson, University of North Carolina Press, 2024, 236 pp.

Jon Bekken


Cultures at the Susquehanna Confluence: The Diaries of the Moravian Mission to the Iroquois Confederacy, 1745–1755
edited and translated by Katherine M. Faull, Penn State University Press, 2024, 260 pp.

Grace Burich


A War of Sections: How Deep South Political Suppression Shaped Voting Rights in America
by Steve Suitts, NewSouth Books, University of Georgia Press, 2024, 544 pp.

Janet Dagley


Behind the Scenes: Covering the JFK Assassination
by Darwin Payne, Denton, Texas, University of North Texas Press, 2023, 306 pp.

Tracy Lucht

DIGITAL MEDIA REVIEWS
Victim/Suspect
directed by Nancy Schwartzman, Netflix (2023)

Josalyn McMillan


Critical Role
https://critrole.com/
Hayley McCullough

ENDNOTES
Endnotes