newsworthy - meaning and definition. What is newsworthy
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What (who) is newsworthy - definition

CRITERIA THAT INFLUENCE THE SELECTION OF EVENTS AS PUBLISHED NEWS
News value; Newsworthy; Importance in journalism; Newsworthiness

newsworthy         
An event, fact, or person that is newsworthy, is considered to be interesting enough to be reported in newspapers or on the radio or television.
The number of deaths makes the story newsworthy...
ADJ
newsworthy         
¦ adjective noteworthy as news.
Derivatives
newsworthiness noun
News values         
News values are "criteria that influence the selection and presentation of events as published news." These values help explain what makes something "newsworthy.

Wikipedia

News values

News values are "criteria that influence the selection and presentation of events as published news." These values help explain what makes something "newsworthy."

News values are not universal and can vary between different cultures. Among the many lists of news values that have been drawn up by scholars and journalists, some attempt to describe news practices across cultures, while others have become remarkably specific to the press of particular (often Western) nations. In the Western tradition, decisions on the selection and prioritization of news are made by editors on the basis of their experience and intuition, although analysis by Galtung and Ruge showed that several factors are consistently applied across a range of news organizations. Their theory was tested on the news presented in four different Norwegian newspapers from the Congo and Cuban crisis of July 1960 and the Cyprus crisis of March–April 1964. Results were mainly consistent with their theory and hypotheses. Johan Galtung later said that the media have misconstrued his work and become far too negative, sensational, and adversarial.

Methodologically and conceptually, news values can be approached from four different perspectives: material (focusing on the material reality of events), cognitive (focusing on people's beliefs and value systems), social (focusing on journalistic practice), and discursive (focusing on the discourse). A discursive perspective tries to systematically examine how news values such as Negativity, Proximity, Eliteness, and others, are constructed through words and images in published news stories. This approach is influenced by linguistics and social semiotics, and is called "discursive news values analysis" (DNVA). It focuses on the "distortion" step in Galtung and Ruge's chain of news communication, by analysing how events are discursively constructed as newsworthy.

Examples of use of newsworthy
1. After all, Israeli Arab victims in this war are newsworthy.
2. One broker‘s cancer scare is as newsworthy to Mr.
3. Newsworthy Ezra Levant, publisher of the Western Standard, told CBC television the magazine decided to publish the cartoons because it considered them newsworthy.
4. Someone‘s private behavior either is or is not newsworthy.
5. Soul singer Luther Vandross‘s death was considered more newsworthy.