KU -JMC 101 FINAL COMPLETE EXAM QUESTIONS AND
VERIFIED ANSWERS (NEWEST)
ANSWER A narrative is a story that has a beginning, middle, and end. An issue
is presented and resolved.
Selective exposure—ANSWER: Isolating yourself. What you listen to is up to
you. We look for media that supports the values of our culture.
Delivering a message to a sizable audience, which may be geographically
dispersed and diversified, is known as mass communication.
Medium-ANSWER A communication channel or mechanism
Libel: ANSWER: Written slander that identifies another individual or
organization and is harmful and untrue. This is not criminal; it is civil, but you
could be sued.
Control over what is written and uttered by legally appointed authorities is
known as censorship.
The belief that experience and interactions are the source of all learning is
known as empiricism. Create narratives based on facts.
By standardizing language, disseminating ideas, boosting literacy, and
expanding the printing industry, the printing press ANSWER transformed
society.
"Marketplace of ideas" - ANSWER Justification for free speech based on the
comparison to the free market notion in economics. They maintained that
human rights were inherent and not merely bestowed by monarchs or the state.
A 1775 newspaper that supported a single political party during the revolution is
known as the "partisan press." The majority of newspapers backed the uprising:
Whig, while others backed the British Co
, Benjamin Harris, the publisher of Publick Occurrences - ANSWER 1690,
released one issue before the British government suppressed it because they
detested it.
The Penny Press democratized the media by allowing publishers to cater to the
tastes of the general population rather than a select few. It was open to all
socioeconomic classes and comprised regular men and women.
Agenda-setting function: ANSWER To sway the public's perception of the
relative importance of various issues. a cultural issue that people should be
aware of.
Wire Service-ANSWER Organizations that supply member newspapers with
global news
An era of pranks, stunts, and propaganda to sell newspapers in whatever manner
possible is known as "yellow journalism."
ANSWER Machine algorithms that function as brain signals are called deep
neural networks.
ANSWER: One of the earliest monopolies in America was the telegraph. To
prevent the abuses of a monopolistic system, governments in Europe assumed
control of the telegraph firms. Western Union.
Avoiding ANSWER strategies that try to hide the destination page or ad content
Guglielmo Marconi created the Spark System, often known as ANSWER, an
early wireless telegraphy system in the late 1800s. It laid the groundwork for
contemporary radio technology by producing electromagnetic waves for long-
distance communication using spark-gap transmitters.
By the end of World War I, American Marconi founded the Radio Corporation
of America (RCA), which increased its production of radio tubes from 5,000 per
month in 1921 to over 200,000 by June 1922.
The FCC's official fairness and objectivity policy, known as the Mayflower
Decision & Fairness Doctrine, established that radio stations could openly
express their opinions on politics without giving opposing viewpoints equal
airtime. Radio stations were able to voice their own opinions as a result. The
goal of the Fairness Doctrine was to guarantee that broadcast stations covered
contentious topics fairly and impartially, especially when it came to political
problems.
VERIFIED ANSWERS (NEWEST)
ANSWER A narrative is a story that has a beginning, middle, and end. An issue
is presented and resolved.
Selective exposure—ANSWER: Isolating yourself. What you listen to is up to
you. We look for media that supports the values of our culture.
Delivering a message to a sizable audience, which may be geographically
dispersed and diversified, is known as mass communication.
Medium-ANSWER A communication channel or mechanism
Libel: ANSWER: Written slander that identifies another individual or
organization and is harmful and untrue. This is not criminal; it is civil, but you
could be sued.
Control over what is written and uttered by legally appointed authorities is
known as censorship.
The belief that experience and interactions are the source of all learning is
known as empiricism. Create narratives based on facts.
By standardizing language, disseminating ideas, boosting literacy, and
expanding the printing industry, the printing press ANSWER transformed
society.
"Marketplace of ideas" - ANSWER Justification for free speech based on the
comparison to the free market notion in economics. They maintained that
human rights were inherent and not merely bestowed by monarchs or the state.
A 1775 newspaper that supported a single political party during the revolution is
known as the "partisan press." The majority of newspapers backed the uprising:
Whig, while others backed the British Co
, Benjamin Harris, the publisher of Publick Occurrences - ANSWER 1690,
released one issue before the British government suppressed it because they
detested it.
The Penny Press democratized the media by allowing publishers to cater to the
tastes of the general population rather than a select few. It was open to all
socioeconomic classes and comprised regular men and women.
Agenda-setting function: ANSWER To sway the public's perception of the
relative importance of various issues. a cultural issue that people should be
aware of.
Wire Service-ANSWER Organizations that supply member newspapers with
global news
An era of pranks, stunts, and propaganda to sell newspapers in whatever manner
possible is known as "yellow journalism."
ANSWER Machine algorithms that function as brain signals are called deep
neural networks.
ANSWER: One of the earliest monopolies in America was the telegraph. To
prevent the abuses of a monopolistic system, governments in Europe assumed
control of the telegraph firms. Western Union.
Avoiding ANSWER strategies that try to hide the destination page or ad content
Guglielmo Marconi created the Spark System, often known as ANSWER, an
early wireless telegraphy system in the late 1800s. It laid the groundwork for
contemporary radio technology by producing electromagnetic waves for long-
distance communication using spark-gap transmitters.
By the end of World War I, American Marconi founded the Radio Corporation
of America (RCA), which increased its production of radio tubes from 5,000 per
month in 1921 to over 200,000 by June 1922.
The FCC's official fairness and objectivity policy, known as the Mayflower
Decision & Fairness Doctrine, established that radio stations could openly
express their opinions on politics without giving opposing viewpoints equal
airtime. Radio stations were able to voice their own opinions as a result. The
goal of the Fairness Doctrine was to guarantee that broadcast stations covered
contentious topics fairly and impartially, especially when it came to political
problems.