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Common collocations with journalism in American Collocation

journalism noun uncountable

US /ˈdʒɜrn(ə)lˌɪzəm/

of a good quality

good
incisive
responsible
serious

The best journalism has always come from dissidents.

trying to change bad things

campaigning
crusading
hard-hitting

Her articles about the health service were crusading journalism at its best.

trying to find out facts

investigative

Clever investigative journalism and many leaked stories led to a call for something to be done.

popular or not serious

gutter
mainstream
muckraking
popular
sensational
sensationalist
tabloid

Maybe this is just another case of sensationalist, tabloid journalism.

when people are paid money for information to be used in newspaper stories

chequebook

Paying the rapist for his story was an outrageous case of chequebook journalism.

not good or accurate

irresponsible
lazy
shoddy
sloppy
unethical

News releases are helpful, but it’s lazy journalism just to print everything they say.

fair or objective

independent
objective

In the interests of objective journalism, a balanced article should have been printed.

modern

contemporary
modern

These pamphlets represented the forerunners of modern British journalism.

of a particular type

literary
political
sports

Generally I think the standard of political journalism is poor in this country.

in a particular form

broadcast
magazine
online
photographic
radio
television

There are obvious signs that the style of newspapers is being influenced by online journalism.