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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 7 page research paper that discusses political campaigns and the media. The writer offers a history of the press in American, a discussion of how the media covers politicians and government and how it influences the public. Bibliography lists 3 sources. 
                                                
Page Count: 
                                                7 pages (~225 words per page)
                                            
 
                                            
                                                File: D0_khcammed.rtf
                                            
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
                                                    
                                                
                                                    of the Constitution considered a free press to be an essential element to a free society. Federalists such as Alexander Hamilton, for example, agree to the inclusion of freedom of  
                                                
                                                    the press in the Bill of Rights simply to satisfy those who advocated for states rights and thereby facilitate ratification of the Constitution (OConnor and Sabato, 2008). Nevertheless, despite these  
                                                
                                                    sentiments, the fact that the freedom of the press has had constitutional protection throughout American history ahs definitively been a factor that has shaped that history and American society as  
                                                
                                                    a whole. The early press, in the first years of the new republic, was sponsored by the political parties themselves and highly partisan.  		Benjamin Day started the New York  
                                                
                                                    Sun, which was politically independent, sold for a penny, and gained its profit from selling advertising (OConnor and Sabato, 2008). By 1861, the penny press had supplanted the partisan press  
                                                
                                                    of the political parties to the point that Lincoln decided that his administration would have no sponsored newspaper (OConnor and Sabato, 2008).  
                                                
                                                    However, by 1890, the nature of journalism had changed again, as "yellow journalism" and "muckraking" characterized virtually all newspaper reporting. Pushed by publishers William Randolph Hearst and Joseph Pulitzer,  
                                                
                                                    their newspaper competed with each other to see which could produce the most sensationalized news (OConnor and Sabato, 2008).  How media covers politicians and government 		While there are three  
                                                
                                                    branches of the government and they are roughly equal in power and authority when judged by their description in the Constitution, it is the president who gets the lions share  
                                                
                                                    of attention from the media (OConnor and Sabato, 2008).  Television tends to portray the president and the courts as confused, contradictory institutions, while the president, more often as not,  
                                                
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