The term "inhabitant journalism" (or "journalisme citoyen" in French) refers to journalism namely done by appendages of the public, particularly connected to the internet. Theoretically, the public entering a field long grasped enviously by traditional reporters could be seen as a somewhat revolution. Citizen journalism appears to be different from usual journalism. We have hypothesised that it arose as a result of public discontent accompanying traditional journalism. According to the reasoning that came before, those illnesses are both quantitative and subjective in nature. We begin if the lack of public satisfaction accompanying the dissemination of traditional reporting, both quantitatively and qualitatively, led to the growth of citizen journalism. In reality, usual journalism raises a sort of issues that force readers to make a decision, that could be a problem in and essentially. The complex nature of important topics, however, create it necessary to manipulate by means of what they are handled. These two axes appear to highlight the primary causes of conflict betwixt traditional journalism and offended audiences.
Author(s) Details:
Célestin Messanga Obama,
Department
of Advertisement, Advance School of Mass Communication, University of Yaoundé
2, Yaoundé, Cameroon.
Please see the link here: https://stm.bookpi.org/RAASS-V4/article/view/9048
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