Abstract
The present study is the first systematic attempt to examine the role of time constraints in journalists' daily routines and practices, at the level of individual news items. Long-standing concerns about journalism's “stopwatch culture” and the negative impact of time pressures on newswork have been exacerbated in the digital age by growing demands for multi-platform technological proficiency, resulting in “hamsterization” of journalistic work. Through the step-by-step reconstruction of work processes underlying over a thousand discrete news items (N = 1023), this study traces statistical correlations between the amount of time at the reporters' disposal and the extent and complexity of journalistic work, across Israeli television, radio, print and online news outlets, outlining the implications of three temporal segments (pre-assignment, work duration, filing-to-publication) for all four media types. Consistent with the received wisdom among scholars we found, inter alia, that in cases of time shortage, newswork contained systematically less diversity and cross-checking, greater involvement of public relations, fewer senior sources and ordinary citizens, and fewer leaks. We conceptualize the reporters' time schedule as a meta-constraint, embodying developments such as dwindling workforce, homogenization of news content across media, and technological innovations which cause both necessary and unnecessary accelerations in news production.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The authors thank Inbal Avraham and Yifat Naim for their assistance in data collection, as well as Tali Avishay-Arbel for her statistical advice.
FUNDING
This research was supported by the Israel Science Foundation [grant number 1104/11].
Notes
1. OECD Key ICT Indicators: see http://www.oecd.org/document/23/0,3746,en_2649_37441_33987543_1_1_1_37441,00.html.