Journal article
"Not an Ounce of Hollywood Bullshit": A Narrative Analysis of News Media Coverage of Spotlight's Oscar Win
The Journal of communication inquiry, v 44(2), pp 157-177
01 Apr 2020
Abstract
A narrative analysis was conducted of news media coverage of the Academy Award-winning movie Spotlight from January 1, 2015, until June 1, 2016, with a focus on how journalists, film critics, and commentators invoked the history of investigative reporting-and of investigative reporting on film-in evaluating Spotlight and the significance of the journalism-related issues it raised. Even as the narrative asks the reader to revisit the "heroic journalist" myth, its elements mitigate against endorsement: the field's financial distress, the focus on "grunt work," the desire of the film's creators to honor journalism's past, the impression that journalists had been cordoned off somewhere until the film reintroduced us to them, and the Spotlight team begrudgingly accepting Hollywood's demands-even the repeated comparisons to All the President's Men-coalesce to negate the film's potential to remind us of the need for aggressive, uncompromising investigative reporting and to affirm the myth of the dogged investigative journalist.
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Details
- Title
- "Not an Ounce of Hollywood Bullshit": A Narrative Analysis of News Media Coverage of Spotlight's Oscar Win
- Creators
- Ronald Bishop - Drexel University
- Publication Details
- The Journal of communication inquiry, v 44(2), pp 157-177
- Publisher
- Sage
- Number of pages
- 21
- Resource Type
- Journal article
- Language
- English
- Academic Unit
- Communication
- Web of Science ID
- WOS:000515935500004
- Scopus ID
- 2-s2.0-85063566761
- Other Identifier
- 991019167750404721
InCites Highlights
Data related to this publication, from InCites Benchmarking & Analytics tool:
- Web of Science research areas
- Communication