Accessing the Media
eBook - ePub

Accessing the Media

How to Get Good Press

  1. 176 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

Accessing the Media

How to Get Good Press

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About This Book

Accessing the Media takes the reader behind the scenes to understand how best to work with press to get publicity. Perfect for politicians, business leaders, lobbyists, and media junkies, this reference provides an insider's look at how the modern newsroom works, detailing the different roles of reporters, editors, and producers. Readers will learn how to forge relationships with media personnel in television, radio, print, and the web to craft the press coverage they want.Award-winning journalist Jill Osborn exposes the three strategic steps that must be used to gain favorable coverage with the media at just the right time. She gives you the inside scoop on how to think like a national or local journalist so you can control the headlines. And she even provides sample press releases to help shape your message. When reading Accessing the Media, you will have a personal media consultant without the cost of hiring one.Whether you are running for office, looking to improve visibility for your business, or simply want a deeper understanding of what you see and read in the news, Accessing the Media is the perfect guide to getting your story out to the world.

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Information

Publisher
Skyhorse
Year
2018
ISBN
9781510730267

Chapter 1

Why You Need the Media

The media’s the most powerful entity on earth. They have the power to make the innocent guilty and to make the guilty innocent, and that’s power. Because they control the minds of the masses.
—Malcolm X
The media controls the world. What is read on the web, heard on the radio, or seen on television shapes the way people think. If you have a message that needs to be heard, you need to understand how the media works.
The press can get votes for politicians and put cash in the pockets of businesses and charities. It can also destroy the fortunes of powerful people overnight. So what is the key to receiving positive media? You will soon receive this inside knowledge by understanding the three points of contact with the press, which I will explain in detail. But, let’s first examine why you must strategically and successfully cultivate an ally in the most powerful entity: the media.
Getting press is an effective way to get your branded message out to a broad range of people. It creates a buzz about your message, your product, or your charity of choice. The media entices other vendors, volunteers, and voters. People are impressed when they hear you on the radio, see you on TV, or read about you in the paper. The phenomenon of being impressed by those in the limelight dates back to our prehistoric society. We follow leaders who receive more attention than us. Most people cannot obtain news coverage. Therefore, those who do move up higher on the social hierarchy.
Daniel Kruger, an evolutionary psychologist from the University of Michigan, explains the psychology behind the fascination of those in the spotlight. He says that an individual believes it is important to follow the thought process of leaders for several purposes. “One is just learning what high-status individuals do so you might more effectively become one. And two, it’s basically political. Knowing what is going on with high-status individuals, you’d be better able to navigate the social scene.” Kruger goes on to say that celebrity obsession is created on purpose. Even talk show hosts are on social media trying to relate even more to their audience in order to connect with viewers. Kruger acknowledges, “It’s savvy marketing.”
Without question, the media has a powerful influence on the “minds of the masses,” as Malcom X noted. As a result, countries around the world control the press by co-opting journalists, putting them in jail, and even executing them. Look at China. According to a story by the New York Times, foreign reporters were videotaped and followed so closely they could not conduct interviews. For Chinese reporters, it is even worse. Their freedom of speech is extremely limited. The Nieman Foundation for Journalism at Harvard observed the treatment of Chinese journalists. The report notes, “In some cases, those who run afoul of the government have been arrested and forced to confess to crimes on state-run television.”
In Mexico, a journalist was gunned down and shot twelve times in broad daylight. The journalist had written extensively about the negativity surrounding the drug trade. It is estimated that around forty journalists have been killed in Mexico since 1992. Six of those slayings happened from March to May of 2017.
In Russia, the dangers of reporting against President Vladimir Putin began to receive attention in the 1990s. In 2006, the journalist Anna Politkovskaya was murdered in an elevator in Moscow. Her death drew significant attention to the threats against Russian journalists. Reportedly, nearly twenty journalists have been recorded as being killed by the Kremlin. According to the New Yorker, “Nearly all the deaths took place in strange circumstances, and none of them have been successfully investigated or prosecuted.” The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) has found that more than fifty journalists have been killed in Russia since 1992. However, the CPJ notes the top three most censored countries are Eritrea, North Korea, and Saudi Arabia.
Another example of the power of the press came after the Republicans won the 2016 presidential election. Right before Democratic President Barack Obama left office, he said that Russia’s president had hacked into the emails of Democrats. Obama said Putin then influenced the election by leaking those emails to the press. For whatever reason with all the negative news Trump received, people never had one negative word consistently tied to Trump. However, voters always remembered “email scandal” and “Hillary.” The assumption is that this led to her losing the race.
“Every two years the American politics industry fills the airwaves with the most virulent, scurrilous, wall-to-wall character assassination of nearly every political practitioner in the country—and then declares itself puzzled that America has lost trust in its politicians.”
—Charles Krauthammer, FOX News contributor and author
One thing Donald Trump did masterfully during the presidential primary campaign against sixteen other Republican candidates was to ensure control of each day’s news cycle—often by making shocking statements. His view was to get himself good publicity each day, but if that was not possible, to get bad publicity. In doing so, he dominated the news day, preventing any of his opponents from getting a chance to make themselves part of the daily political discussion. Basically, Trump played the equivalent of ball control offense. As long as he could keep any of his opponents from having possession, they could not win.
In addition, there were analysts who compared what Trump spent on paid advertising, what his opponents spent, and what the equivalent dollar value of the coverage he got in the media was. Trump spent less out of his pocket than nearly all of his opponents, but the dollar value of “free” coverage for him compared to his opponents was off the charts.
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After President Trump was elected he fired FBI Director James Comey. Comey then leaked documents about personal conversations between he and the president to the press in hopes that a special counsel would be appointed to investigate Trump’s ties to Russia. It worked. The special counsel was appointed. The media’s story also led to Comey testifying under oath before some members of the Senate. Comey was finally able to tell the whole world his true feelings in a controlled litigation style. The media continued to chew on that one as Trump responded, calling Comey a leaker and a liar. The significance here is that one of the most historic hearings on Capitol Hill all started because a former FBI director went to the most powerful entity: the press.
The media creates powerful results and even the biggest leaders of the world understand that fact. In 2013, former CIA employee Edward Snowden leaked a high volume of classified documents to the press. Some say Snowden is a criminal for leaking documents of national security. Others believe he is a hero. Either way, what is most significant here is that Snowden strategically ran to the press. He did not sprint to a lawyer. He did not track down the president of the United States. He went to the press to expose information to the masses. It worked. The news spread faster than an Olympian skier zipping down an icy slope.
Even at the local level, the press is seen as the most powerful entity. On March 28, 2017, the Winston-Salem Journal reported on the front page of the newspaper, “Councilmen buy stake in Chronicle.” The story goes on to say that two African-American councilmen would now be the directors of a weekly paper that mainly served the African-American community. The general counsel for the North Carolina Press Association commented on the purchase, saying, “It is entirely up to the readers of the paper to decide what they think about it.” A teacher of journalism ethics at UNC School of Media and Journalism also commented on the councilmen purchasing the Chronicle, “The folks who purchased it can say we are going to be fair and we are going to allow the journalists who work there to do their journalistic duty. But they are going to be faced with folks who are going to wonder if that is really possible.”
Fake media has started to make its presence as well. For example, on Christmas Eve in 2016, a fake news story led the Pakistani Prime Minister to threaten nuclear war against Iran. The fabricated news story falsely said Iran was threatening war. As a result, the Pakistani Prime Minister responded with a real threat of war. The fake news story was published on the website awdnews.com. The multiple typos and misattributed quotes beg the question, “What information is true and who authorized this fake news?” Luckily, the situation was corrected before real action was taken.
In April 2017, Germany decided to take a stance against the spread of fake news on social media sites. Social websites such as Facebook and YouTube can be fined up to $53 million with Germany’s new law. Facebook, who has 29 million active users in Germany, noted to the press they are working with local companies to combat the fake news phenomenon. According to a report by Reuters, German politicians worry about the influence of fake news and reported Justice Minister Heiko Maas as saying, “There should be just as little tolerance for criminal rabble rousing on social networks as on the street.”
Fake news does influence your thought process and emotions. Dr. Mehmet Oz of The Dr. Oz Show discussed the effects of fake news on the brain. During a study, Dr. Oz created two fake news stories. One was meant to rev up Republicans and the other to rile up Democrats. Neuropsychiatrist Dr. Daniel Amen assessed the brain activity of various women who read the false stories. One woman with liberal beliefs showed signs of sadness by the fake news story. The brain activity in the conservative woman resembled signs of physical threat by the fake news story crafted for her. Fake news stories do actually have the ability to make us feel despondent or susceptible to danger.
Even though the existence of fake news stories remains a problem, the true media still remains a powerful source. Accessing the press for financial gain, for example, can prove to be a mighty tool in the shed. Often times, the media acts as advertisement for you or your company without ever charging a penny. Just look at what the Huffington Post reported about Apple: “Nevertheless, the point remains: Apple can spend less on advertising than rivals like Microsoft and still get hype by just creating an information vacuum around its products and letting the hyperventilating media fill in the gaps around it.”
Did you ever stop to think how and why certain stories appear in the press? For many, the irony of the timing of a breaking news story does cross their minds, but there is nothing to substantiate that thought. So the idea is pushed aside, the story is absorbed as truth, and the timing assumed to be a coincidence. It is seldom irony nor coincidence when Apple is in the news. The company is meticulous. Apple carefully plans their every move. Anyone looking for press should follow suit.
The press has access to millions of consumers collectively, who can help spread the word about you or your product. Even if your press coverage does not talk directly about your product, but promotes something positive about your business, you are getting your name out there, or the concept of what you are selling. People have a fascination with those who receive press. The news buzz about you will entice clients or buyers to notice you above your opponents. Just like a coach knows how to call the perfect play by reading the players on the basketball court, the press knows how to anticipate what consumers and constituents want to watch, read, or hear.
“According to the report, advertisers will have spent $72.09 billion on U.S. digital advertising by the end of 2016, while TV spending will account for $71.29 billion.”
—Forbes
When someone sees an advertisement, he or she may question the motivation behind the advertisement and therefore question you or your product. Consumers buy based on word-of-mouth. The news is the best way to spread information to a mass amount of people at no cost. So when you get positive press, more cash stays in your wallet because money is saved on advertisement. Plus, once you are on the news, you can send the link to a consumer/client/buyer/voter. You can also send your news clip to other news stations proving you have been on the news and are a reliable source. Getting your foot inside the newsroom door provides you with credibility that makes you bigger and better than your competition. And wouldn’t you like to beat your competition?
In Sir Isaac Newton’s law of gravity, all objects attract each other based upon a certain gravitational pull. Newton’s law of gravity could apply to the news and you. If you are a politician, the news needs you. If you are a subject matter expert, the news needs you. There will be an undeniable gravitational pull between you and the media. Why, then, is it hard to receive favorable coverage? Perhaps, the news has not heard of your story. As my eighth-grade English teacher, Mr. Michael Rewald, once said, “There are no boring things in this world, only things whose significances are not yet appreciated.” If the thunder of your story has not been heard yet by a news station, I am assuming you did not present your story properly. If this is the case, you might wonder, what is the step-by-step process to accessing the media?
Here is the answer. There are certain ways to access the press and inform the public about the truth. There are also specific times when the media is hungriest for a news story. You want to strike accordingly. You will soon ascertain the art of how and when to strategically pitch a news story. As a result, you will maximize your own positive press coverage by putting on the full court press with our successful strategies. Once you do, you can share this book and your secrets with your friends. As a media expert, I too want to hear all about your success. Email me at: [email protected].

Chapter 2

Getting Press Coverage: A Behind-the-Scenes Look

Ashley Papa is a network television producer in New York City and author of Vixen Investigations. As a producer at the top level, she has this advice:
Utilize every media outlet out there. The Networks and big publications are obviously a huge deal, but there are also tons of local television stations, radio stations, podcasts, magazines, and papers all over the country. That saying, “go big or go home,” doesn’t apply because press is press and often, the big guys pick up the stuff from the little guys. . . . If nobody is getting back to you about your story it means they A. Aren’t interested, B. Aren’t interested right now, or C. It ended up in their clutter mailbox and they’ll never see it. Move on.
While each news station is different, they are also very much alike. Knowing that, you can influence the media across the spectrum. It starts with local coverage first. Local stories can reliably lead to national attention. National media looks for stories in local outlets daily. It is through local media that you can get yourself state and national coverage. Cultivate your local media contacts. If you can influence the local media, you can be a top contender for the national media.
Why is it that local media controls the national media? Because the local media tests the story out to see how much traction your story picks up. If your story gains a significant number of viewers, the national media notices. The national media has not had to do the initial legwork of research. Nor has the national media wasted time discovering whether or not the story resonates with an audience.
What is newsworthy? Anything. It just depends on your pitch. I have seen local papers cover speakers at a Rotary Club meeting, just to fill the pages with pictures and encourage a sense of community. Keep a tally of which outlets are most willing to cover your story and track this with a chart. Then, you can refer back to it when you pitch another story.
For the general public, it’s important to know what stories the media is presenting to you. When it comes to a headlining news story, there definitely is more than mee...

Table of contents

  1. Front Cover
  2. Half-Title Page
  3. Title Page
  4. Copyright Page
  5. Dedication
  6. Contents
  7. Foreword
  8. Acknowledgments
  9. Chapter 1: Why You Need the Media
  10. Chapter 2: Getting Press Coverage: A Behind-the-Scenes Look
  11. Chapter 3: Three Points of Contact
  12. Chapter 4: The Inner Workings of a Newsroom
  13. Chapter 5: First Point of Contact: Before the Event
  14. Chapter 6: Timing: When to Contact Each News Outlet
  15. Chapter 7: Going Live in Studio
  16. Chapter 8: Second Point of Contact: Greet the Reporter
  17. Chapter 9: Third Point of Contact: You Are the Reporter
  18. Chapter 10: The Newspaper
  19. Chapter 11: How to Record for TV and Radio
  20. Chapter 12: Social Media
  21. Appendix A: Sample Press Releases
  22. Appendix B: Quiz: Do You Get the Media?
  23. Source Notes
  24. About the Author