āĻ āύā§āϏāύā§āϧāĻžāύ āĻāϰā§āύ
āĻ āĻāĻŋāϧāĻžāύā§āϰ āĻāĻžāώāĻž āύāĻŋāϰā§āĻŦāĻžāĻāύ āĻāϰā§āύ
āĻāĻĒāύāĻžāϰ āĻāĻžāώāĻž āύāĻŋāϰā§āĻŦāĻžāĻāύ āĻāϰā§āύ
churnalism
/ËtĘÉËnÉlÉĒzÉm/
Churnalism
01
āϰāĻŋāϏāĻžāĻāĻā§āϞāĻŋāĻ āϏāĻžāĻāĻŦāĻžāĻĻāĻŋāĻāϤāĻž, āĻ āϞāϏ āϏāĻžāĻāĻŦāĻžāĻĻāĻŋāĻāϤāĻž
a style of journalism characterized by the excessive reliance on press releases, wire services, and other pre-packaged content, often resulting in the publication of recycled or unverified news stories with little original reporting or analysis
āĻāĻĻāĻžāĻšāϰāĻŖ
Journalists who focus on churnalism may not spend enough time fact-checking or exploring the real story.
āϝā§āϏāĻŦ āϏāĻžāĻāĻŦāĻžāĻĻāĻŋāĻ āĻāĻžāϰā§āύāĻžāϞāĻŋāĻāĻŽ-āĻ āĻŽāύā§āύāĻŋāĻŦā§āĻļ āĻāϰā§āύ āϤāĻžāϰāĻž āϝāĻĨā§āώā§āĻ āϏāĻŽāϝāĻŧ āĻŦā§āϝāϝāĻŧ āύāĻžāĻ āĻāϰāϤ⧠āĻĒāĻžāϰā§āύ āϏāϤā§āϝāϤāĻž āϝāĻžāĻāĻžāĻ āĻŦāĻž āĻĒā§āϰāĻā§āϤ āĻāϞā§āĻĒ āĻ
āύā§āĻŦā§āώāĻŖā§āĨ¤
āύāĻŋāĻāĻāĻŦāϰā§āϤ⧠āĻļāĻŦā§āĻĻ



























