Dictionary Definition
sensationalism
Noun
1 subject matter that is calculated to excite and
please vulgar tastes
2 the journalistic use of subject matter that
appeals to vulgar tastes; "the tabloids relied on sensationalism to
maintain their circulation" [syn: luridness]
3 (philosophy) the ethical doctrine that feeling
is the only criterion for what is good [syn: sensualism]
4 (philosophy) the doctrine that knowledge
derives from experience [syn: empiricism, empiricist
philosophy]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
Noun
- Behavior that is intentionally controversial, loud, or attention-grabbing. Especially applied to news media as a pejorative sense that they are reporting in a manner to gain attention or notoriety but at the expense of accuracy and professionalism.
- A theory of philosophy that all knowledge is ultimately derived from the senses.
Translations
Behavior that is intentionally controversial,
loud, or attention-grabbing
- German: Sensationsmache
philosophy
Extensive Definition
Sensationalism is a manner of being extremely
controversial,
loud, or attention grabbing. It is especially applied to the
emphasis of the unusual or atypical. It is also a form of
theatre.
The term is commonly used in reference to the
media. Critics of media bias of
all political stripes often charge the media with engaging in
sensationalism in their reporting and conduct. That is, the notion
that media outlets often choose to report heavily on stories with
shock
value or attention-grabbing names or events, rather than
reporting on more pressing issues to the general public.
In the extreme case, the media would report the
news if it makes a good story, without much regard for the factual
accuracy. Thus, a press release including ridiculous and false
pseudoscientific
claims issued by a controversial group is guaranteed a lot of media
coverage. Two examples are claims of human cloning by Clonaid and claims
of cold
fusion by Pons and Fleischmann.
Such stories are often perceived (rightfully, or
mistakenly) as partisan
or biased due to the sensational nature in which they are reported.
A media piece may report on a political figure in a biased way or
present one side of an issue while deriding another, or neutrally,
it may simply include sensational aspects such as zealots,
doomsayers and/or junk
science. Complex subjects and affairs are often subject to
sensationalism. Exciting and emotionally charged aspects can be
drawn out without providing elements such as pertinent background,
investigative, or contextual information needed for the viewer to
form his or her opinion on the subject.
Mainstream media is sometimes duped into
reprinting stories from comedy sites as facts without any factual
checks. One widely reported example involved The Onion's
story on Harry Potter
causing an increased interest in Satanism. The
media is also occasionally taken in by mistakes, such as a story
about deep sea creatures brought by the 2004 Asian tsunami.
One presumed goal of sensational reporting is
increased (or sustained) viewership
or readership which can be sold to advertisers, the result
being a lesser focus on proper journalism and a greater focus on
the "juicy" aspects of a story that pull in a larger share of
audience.
History of Sensationalism
Many believe that sensationalism is a practice of media corporations especially through Television News whereby the use of pictures and footage overpowers the story creating a different and often biased viewpoint. However, Mitchell Stephens in his account of "The History of News" illustrates that sensationalism can be found in the Roman Acta, and was spread with enthusiasm by preliterate societies. Sensationalism can be found in books of the 16th and 17th century however sensationalism was viewed differently in this era. Rather it was used to teach moral lessons.It is difficult, therefore, to resist the
conclusion - however unpleasant and unfashionable - that the bulk
of the blame for the amount of sensationalism that continues to
appear in the news rests not only with media corporations, no
matter how greedy, but with our natures. Sensationalism is further
believed by Stephens to have brought the news to a new audience. He
discusses the heavy use of sensationalism aim towards the lower
class as they have less of a need to understand politics and the
economy. But by doing this, this audience is being further educated
and encouraged to find interest in the happenings of their
society.
Controversy is created "when journalists confine
themselves to the search for the violent or the miraculous, not
only do they paint a grotesque face on the world, but they deprive
their audiences of the opportunity to examine subtler occurrences
with larger consequences" (Stephens, 2007:113). However without
gossip, without crime - without the humanising and stimulating
touch of occasional inanities and outrages - the news would lose
much of its vitality. News is a coarse, unrefined substance made up
of events selected for their strangeness as much as their
significance, their emotional appeal as much as their import.
Sensationalism In Broadcasting
Sensationalism is often blamed for the
'infotainment style' of many of the news programs broadcast over
radio and television. Yet the news has always been enjoyed for as
long as it has been exchanged (Stephens, 2006:15). The debate of
sensationalism used in the mass medium of broadcasting is based on
a misunderstanding of its audience, especially the television
audience. Thompson (1999) explains that the term 'mass' which is
connected to broadcasting, suggests a 'vast audience of many
thousands, even millions of passive individuals'. When
sensationalism used through broadcasting is combined with this
concept of the passive mass audience, it is assumed the audience
consumes all information fed to them. However Thompson continues
that the recipients of a message, no matter how sensationalized it
is, ' make with it what they will, and the producer is not there to
elaborate or to correct possible misunderstanding' (1999:195). Thus
it is the misinterpretation of the broadcast audience as passive
consumers which is problematic for the use of sensationalism.
Further more, whilst the newspaper is often seen
as a more credible source than television news because of
televisions use of footage over spoken information; they are both
sensationalized to the same extent. Television news is restricted
to showing the scenes of crimes rather than the crime itself
because of the unpredictability of events. Whereas newspaper
writers can always recall what they did not witness. "No act of
violence is beyond the reach of the still formidable magic of
words" (Stephens, 2006:280). Furthermore, television news writers
have room for fewer words than their newspaper counterparts. Their
stories are measured in seconds, not column inches and thus even
with footage, television stories are undeniably shallower than most
newspaper stories. And because their words are intended for a less
acute, less painstaking sense — hearing — television news writers
must forswear the more complex formulations a newspaper reporter
might hazard (Stephes, 2007: 281).
Sensational spellings are common in advertising
and product placement. In particular, brand names such as Cadbury's
"Creme
Egg" (standard English spelling: cream) or Kellogg's "Froot Loops"
(fruit) may use unexpected spellings to draw attention, and also to
make an everyday word patentable. The inscription "Fish 'n' chips"
above a chip shop is similar. Sensational spelling may take on a
cult value in popular culture. An example of this is the heavy
metal umlaut. In esoteric circles, magic
is often spelled magick
to differentiate it from stage
magic.
It is also often used in teenybopper media including
that targetting young
children including
Miley
Cyrus, Hilary Duff,
and other teen celebrities.
References
Stephens, Mitchell. "The History of News" Oxford University Press, New York, 2007 Thompson, John (1999) "The Media and Modernity" in Hugh Mackay and Tim O'Sullivan (eds)) The Media Reader: Continuity and Transformation, Sage, LondonSee also
sensationalism in Spanish: Sensacionalismo
sensationalism in French: Sensationnalisme
sensationalism in Hungarian: Bulvársajtó
sensationalism in Portuguese:
Sensacionalismo
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Barnumism, Thespian art,
affectation,
aggrandizement,
amateur theatricals, amplification, ballyhoo, bedizenment, big talk,
blatancy, blood and
thunder, blowing up, brazenness, burlesque, caricature, colorfulness, convolution, crudeness, dash, dazzle, dazzlingness, demonstrativeness,
dilatation, dilation, dramatic art,
dramatic form, dramatic irony, dramatic stroke, dramatic structure,
dramaticism,
dramatics, dramatism, dramaturgy, emotional appeal,
emotionalism,
emotionality,
emotionalization,
emotionalizing,
emotiveness,
emotivity, enhancement, enlargement, exaggerating, exaggeration, excess, exorbitance, expansion, extravagance, extravaganza, extravagation, extreme, flagrancy, flamboyance, flashiness, flatulence, flatulency, fulsomeness, gaiety, garishness, gaudery, gaudiness, glare, glitter, gorgeousness, grandiloquence, grandioseness, grandiosity, heightening, high-flown
diction, histrionics, histrionism, huckstering, human interest,
hyperbole, hyperbolism, inflatedness, inflation, inordinacy, jauntiness, jazziness, lexiphanicism, loftiness, loudness, love interest,
luridness, magnification, magniloquence, making
scenes, melodrama,
melodramatics,
mere rhetoric, meretriciousness,
nonrationalness,
obtrusiveness,
orotundity, ostentation, ostentatious
complexity, overemphasis, overestimation, overkill, overstatement, panache, platitudinous
ponderosity, play construction, polysyllabic profundity, pomposity, pompous prolixity,
pompousness,
pontification,
pretension, pretentiousness,
prodigality,
profuseness, prose
run mad, puffery,
puffing up, rhetoric,
rhetoricalness,
sententiousness,
shamelessness,
showiness, sportiness, staginess, stiltedness, stretching, superlative, swelling
utterance, swollen phrase, swollenness, tall talk,
tawdriness, theatricalism, theatricality, theatricals, theatricism, theatrics, tortuosity, tortuousness, touting, travesty, tumidity, tumidness, turgescence, turgidity, unreasoningness,
visceralness,
vulgarness, yellow
journalism