Abstract
Online News Outlets or Online News Outweighed? - a Comparative Analysis on Huffington Post and the Paper (Pengpai Xinwen)
Highlights
Accepted: Introduction The emergence of new communication technologies inevitably raises questions about the extent to which existing media work will change as a result, and this is true in the case of journalism, both for the news production and the news consumption (Deuze & Marjoribanks, 2009; Alqudsi-ghabra, Al-Bannai, T., & Al-Bahrani, 2011; Mitchelstein & Boczkowski, 2010)
Different from the origin of Huffington Post, The Paper is a “new media” project directed by the Shanghai United Media Group, it shares the same function as Huffington Post as an original-produced online news source targeted on different levels of digital media market (i.e. Web, APP, Wap, and other social media platform like Weibo and Wechat)
The development of Huffington Post in the European case was especially embedded with partisan characteristic from the beginning
Summary
Accepted: Introduction The emergence of new communication technologies inevitably raises questions about the extent to which existing media work will change as a result, and this is true in the case of journalism, both for the news production and the news consumption (Deuze & Marjoribanks, 2009; Alqudsi-ghabra, Al-Bannai, T., & Al-Bahrani, 2011; Mitchelstein & Boczkowski, 2010). Different studies have been documented in discussing about whether online news will substitute or displace print newspapers (Ahlers, 2006; Althaus & Tewksbury, 2000; Gentzkow, 2007; Newell, Pilotta, & Thomas, 2008), whether the internet provides a platform through which networked individuals can form a “Fifth Estate” (Dutton, 2009; Baum & Groeling, 2008), and whether the media digitization has affected journalistic norms and practices (Deuze, 2003, 2005; Lewis, Kaufhold, & Lasorsa, 2010).
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