journalism

simple noun30 collocationsAvg. frequency: 6.5

Refers to working professionally in the field of journalism.

The entire community, industry, and culture surrounding journalism.

Journalism conducted on the internet.

Refers to high-quality, ethical, and well-researched journalism.

Journalism focused on reporting on sports topics and events.

Journalism that adheres to professional standards and ethics.

Journalism for radio and television.

Journalism intended for publication in newspapers.

Journalism intended for publication in magazines.

Journalism associated with printed media like newspapers and magazines.

Conventional journalism from established media outlets.

Journalism intended for broadcast on television.

Journalism that involves in-depth research to uncover hidden facts.

Journalism intended for broadcast on the radio.

Journalism aimed at a mass audience, often focusing on entertainment.

Sensationalist journalism typical of tabloid newspapers.

Journalism that is critical and direct in its reporting.

Journalism that reports on scientific developments and topics.

Journalism that scrutinizes the actions of powerful entities.

Journalism focused on music criticism and news.

Journalism focused on the fashion industry.

Journalism focused on health and medical topics.

A form of nonfiction that combines journalistic research with the techniques of fiction writing.

Journalism that is done in a careless and untidy way.

Journalism characterized by a lack of effort and thoroughness.

Poor-quality and careless journalism.

Journalism that presents little or no legitimate well-researched news and instead uses eye-catching headlines to sell more newspapers.

The practice of paying large sums of money for exclusive rights to a story, especially one from a person involved in a recent news event. 'Chequebook' is BrE, 'checkbook' is AmE.

Reporting in newspapers that tries to shock or excite rather than give true information.

A single article or report.