The New Advertisers: How Foundation Funding Impacts Journalism

Many journalism stakeholders have begun looking to philanthropic foundations to help newsrooms find economic sustainability. The rapidly expanding role of foundations as a revenue source for news publishers raises an important question: How do foundations exercise their influence over the newsrooms...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Patrick Ferrucci, Jacob L. Nelson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Cogitatio 2019-12-01
Series:Media and Communication
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.cogitatiopress.com/mediaandcommunication/article/view/2251
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spelling doaj-c6a61b26483c4a92933906f78fba5f5a2020-11-25T01:11:22ZengCogitatioMedia and Communication2183-24392019-12-0174455510.17645/mac.v7i4.22511253The New Advertisers: How Foundation Funding Impacts JournalismPatrick Ferrucci0Jacob L. Nelson1Department of Journalism, College of Media, Communication & Information, University of Colorado Boulder, USAWalter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication, Arizona State University, USAMany journalism stakeholders have begun looking to philanthropic foundations to help newsrooms find economic sustainability. The rapidly expanding role of foundations as a revenue source for news publishers raises an important question: How do foundations exercise their influence over the newsrooms they fund? Using the hierarchy of influence model, this study utilizes more than 40 interviews with journalists at digitally native nonprofit news organizations and employees from foundations that fund nonprofit journalism to better understand the impact of foundation funding on journalistic practice. Drawing on previous scholarship exploring extra-media influence on the news industry, we argue that the impact of foundations on journalism parallels that of advertisers throughout the 20th century—with one important distinction: Journalism practitioners and researchers have long forbidden the influence from advertisers on editorial decisions, seeing the blurring of the two as inherently unethical. Outside funding from foundations, on the other hand, is often premised on editorial influence, complicating efforts by journalists to maintain the firewall between news revenue and production.https://www.cogitatiopress.com/mediaandcommunication/article/view/2251advertisingfoundationsjournalismnews productionnewsroomsrevenue
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Patrick Ferrucci
Jacob L. Nelson
spellingShingle Patrick Ferrucci
Jacob L. Nelson
The New Advertisers: How Foundation Funding Impacts Journalism
Media and Communication
advertising
foundations
journalism
news production
newsrooms
revenue
author_facet Patrick Ferrucci
Jacob L. Nelson
author_sort Patrick Ferrucci
title The New Advertisers: How Foundation Funding Impacts Journalism
title_short The New Advertisers: How Foundation Funding Impacts Journalism
title_full The New Advertisers: How Foundation Funding Impacts Journalism
title_fullStr The New Advertisers: How Foundation Funding Impacts Journalism
title_full_unstemmed The New Advertisers: How Foundation Funding Impacts Journalism
title_sort new advertisers: how foundation funding impacts journalism
publisher Cogitatio
series Media and Communication
issn 2183-2439
publishDate 2019-12-01
description Many journalism stakeholders have begun looking to philanthropic foundations to help newsrooms find economic sustainability. The rapidly expanding role of foundations as a revenue source for news publishers raises an important question: How do foundations exercise their influence over the newsrooms they fund? Using the hierarchy of influence model, this study utilizes more than 40 interviews with journalists at digitally native nonprofit news organizations and employees from foundations that fund nonprofit journalism to better understand the impact of foundation funding on journalistic practice. Drawing on previous scholarship exploring extra-media influence on the news industry, we argue that the impact of foundations on journalism parallels that of advertisers throughout the 20th century—with one important distinction: Journalism practitioners and researchers have long forbidden the influence from advertisers on editorial decisions, seeing the blurring of the two as inherently unethical. Outside funding from foundations, on the other hand, is often premised on editorial influence, complicating efforts by journalists to maintain the firewall between news revenue and production.
topic advertising
foundations
journalism
news production
newsrooms
revenue
url https://www.cogitatiopress.com/mediaandcommunication/article/view/2251
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