Sexism on the set: Gendered expectations of TV broadcasters in a social media world

This research examines gender performance expectations of television journalists in the era of social media. A qualitative survey found little to no progress in reducing discourse critical of broadcasters’ appearance in the 20 years since Engstrom and Ferri’s (2000) study, with social media adding a...

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Main Authors: Finneman, T, Jenkins, J
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Taylor and Francis 2018
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author Finneman, T
Jenkins, J
author_facet Finneman, T
Jenkins, J
author_sort Finneman, T
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description This research examines gender performance expectations of television journalists in the era of social media. A qualitative survey found little to no progress in reducing discourse critical of broadcasters’ appearance in the 20 years since Engstrom and Ferri’s (2000) study, with social media adding another avenue to “correct” rather than challenge gender norms. Nearly all journalist respondents believe viewer criticism has increased with the rise of social media and believe their organizations should provide training and policies addressing this concern. However, 90% of respondents said their organizations provide neither, suggesting news outlets should enhance social media policies.
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spelling oxford-uuid:adb265b3-ad59-48a2-a9cd-5fc3101791bd2022-03-27T03:37:29ZSexism on the set: Gendered expectations of TV broadcasters in a social media worldJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:adb265b3-ad59-48a2-a9cd-5fc3101791bdEnglishSymplectic Elements at OxfordTaylor and Francis2018Finneman, TJenkins, JThis research examines gender performance expectations of television journalists in the era of social media. A qualitative survey found little to no progress in reducing discourse critical of broadcasters’ appearance in the 20 years since Engstrom and Ferri’s (2000) study, with social media adding another avenue to “correct” rather than challenge gender norms. Nearly all journalist respondents believe viewer criticism has increased with the rise of social media and believe their organizations should provide training and policies addressing this concern. However, 90% of respondents said their organizations provide neither, suggesting news outlets should enhance social media policies.
spellingShingle Finneman, T
Jenkins, J
Sexism on the set: Gendered expectations of TV broadcasters in a social media world
title Sexism on the set: Gendered expectations of TV broadcasters in a social media world
title_full Sexism on the set: Gendered expectations of TV broadcasters in a social media world
title_fullStr Sexism on the set: Gendered expectations of TV broadcasters in a social media world
title_full_unstemmed Sexism on the set: Gendered expectations of TV broadcasters in a social media world
title_short Sexism on the set: Gendered expectations of TV broadcasters in a social media world
title_sort sexism on the set gendered expectations of tv broadcasters in a social media world
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AT jenkinsj sexismonthesetgenderedexpectationsoftvbroadcastersinasocialmediaworld