Difference Between Public Relations And Media

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Public relations and journalism go together well, but there is always conflict. The two media work with each other to promote their content. In the journalists’ conversation in the YouTube video, they talk badly about PR professionals. In the article PR and the Media: A collaborative relationship, they are not quite as blunt about their dislike of PR. They mainly just feel that PR people are annoying. PR professionals contact journalists “10 to 15 times a day” according to some reporters. The journalists’ conversation in the video somewhat validates the opinions in the article. The authors of the article interviewed PR professionals as well as journalists. In the case of their relationships with one another, the article states that, “many representatives …show more content…

Journalists broadcast ideas over different media to diverse audiences, and PR people want to get in on it. PR creates video news releases, which are commercials created to look like real news. They send them to news sources to play when they need extra content to fill time, and they are paid. PR wants to sell its product or service and journalists want viewers or readers, so they work together. Some of the journalists interviewed said “both groups were viewed to have the same task and thus to be ‘of the same breed.’” Journalists do believe that the professions are similar. In the video, the two journalists mention that journalism and communications (or PR) are taught at universities together now, like the JAMS program. They do not like that this is happening, and they do not believe they should be grouped together, but the article disagrees. It says that journalists acknowledge the fact that their relationship with public relations is mutually beneficial, but they still think they are annoying to deal with because of their …show more content…

She points out the fact that “half the [PR] experts thought lying could be acceptable in their profession.” I think many people say that they would lie because they would do anything to get ahead in the competitive market of public relations. I would normally say that lying is okay to protect a client, but it depends on the situation. If the situation has the potential to be illegal and cost the client’s company and the PR company to get a lawsuit, it is definitely not worth it. If any sort of repercussions may happen due to lying, it really is not worth it. PR professionals can protect their clients in other ways that do not involve lying, like creating good content in the first place. PR somewhat undermines journalism. Journalism and PR should work together to cross promote, but it ends up with PR creating an advertisement and paying the journalists to run the ad for a larger audience. Although, journalists are not completely helpless. Many times journalists do not have enough content to fill up news time or space, and they rely on public relations materials to fill the space. PR does not technically generate real news, so because it is promotional news journalists do not like it or respect it as

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