Misplaced Pages

Press club

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

A press club is an organization for journalists and others who are professionally engaged in the production and dissemination of news . A press club whose membership is defined by the press of a given country may be known as a National Press Club of that country.

#648351

6-498: Press clubs for foreign correspondents are called Foreign Correspondents' Clubs . In Japan , press clubs are called kisha clubs. They often create close relationships to their sources , effectively monopolizing the news. They also often institute "blackboard agreements", in which they agree not to report stories until a certain date. Examples of press clubs include the following. (Chattogram, Bangladesh) Foreign correspondent A correspondent or on-the-scene reporter

12-468: Is usually a journalist or commentator for a magazine, or an agent who contributes reports to a newspaper , or radio or television news , or another type of company, from a remote, often distant, location. A foreign correspondent is stationed in a foreign country. The term "correspondent" refers to the original practice of filing news reports via postal letter. The largest networks of correspondents belong to ARD (Germany) and BBC (UK). In Britain,

18-480: The red carpet of an entertainment or media event, such as a premiere , award ceremony or festival . A foreign correspondent is any individual who reports from primarily foreign locations. A war correspondent is a foreign correspondent who covers stories first-hand from a war zone. A foreign bureau is a news bureau set up to support a news gathering operation in a foreign country. Cost of living correspondents have been employed by several news agencies in

24-479: The Society on path and commons matters in their area including representing the Society at Public Inquiries. A capitol correspondent is a correspondent who reports from headquarters of government. A legal or justice correspondent reports on issues involving legal or criminal justice topics, and may often report from the vicinity of a courthouse. A red carpet correspondent is an entertainment reporter who reports from

30-474: The light of the "cost of living" crisis in the United Kingdom from 2021 onwards. In TV news, a "live on-the-scene" reporter reports from the field during a "live shot". This has become an extremely popular format with the advent of Eyewitness News . A recent cost-saving measure is for local TV news to dispense with out-of-town reporters and replace them with syndicated correspondents, usually supplied by

36-489: The term 'correspondent' usually refers to someone with a specific specialist area, such as health correspondent. A 'reporter' is usually someone without such expertise who is allocated stories by the newsdesk on any story in the news. A 'correspondent' can sometimes have direct executive powers, for example a 'Local Correspondent' (voluntary) of the Open Spaces Society (founded 1865) has some delegated powers to speak for

#648351