Highlight media coverage concepts
Media coverage concepts are numerous in turn for each country and its culture, but ultimately, they agree on a number of criteria and concepts that will serve as a framework for which we will not go, and are closely linked to the everyday and potentially hourly events.
The concepts of media coverage are highlighted as follows:
Concept 1:
The subject that media, media networks, and news agencies are seeking to cover, such as crimes, wars, local developments, and so on, where these agencies and networks recruit or hire a journalist or group of journalists to cover the story or topic.
For example, if the President wants to nominate a new member of the Council of Ministers, then CNN may appoint a journalist to investigate the matter and report on the candidate's background, historical record, and another journalist to study the achievements that this candidate will add to the Council.
The larger and more important the story is, the more topics to be covered, and the more journalists.
Concept 2:
Media coverage is the cornerstone of the media because it has psychological and moral implications for the recipient, and media coverage is not new in the media arena, but it has existed for some time, as is the case with everything in our society; it has evolved in a way that is commensurate with the development of technology and communication.
Media coverage will forever remain the only way to know all.
Concept 3:
The third definition defines media coverage as a process that relies on information from a press or media institution about a particular event, and on all the simple details that relate entirely to statements and facts, which occur during the reception of statements and details of the event. This includes the dissemination of comprehensive knowledge of the causes of the event and the developments that occur, and where they occur.
