The IT GUY
Published First
State of Emergency
Journalism
Policy Formation
100

What is a Prosumer?

This term describes a modern media user who simultaneously acts as both a producer and a consumer of content

100

Who is Monroe?

This 1975 scholar offered one of the simplest definitions of public opinion: "the sum or aggregation of private opinions on any particular issue".

100

What is the Committee on Public Information (or Creel Committee)?

This committee was established by the US government during World War I specifically to manage and shape public opinion in support of the war effort.

100

Who was Winston Churchill?

This British Prime Minister provocatively claimed that "there is no such thing as public opinion," only "published opinion".

100

What is Participatory Budgeting?

This real-world example of participatory theory allows citizens to vote directly on community projects like infrastructure or social programs

200

Who is Zizi Papacharissi?

This scholar, a professor at the University of Illinois at Chicago, famously examined whether the internet truly fulfills the conditions of a Habermasian democratic public sphere

200

Who is Walter Lippmann?

In his 1922 book Public Opinion, he introduced the "pseudo-environment," arguing that media constructs our understanding of reality because we cannot experience the whole world directly.

200

What is Affective Polarization?

This specific dimension of polarization is rooted in social identity and emotion—it refers to how much people "like" their own group and "despise" the opposition

200

What is Objectivity (or Neutrality)?

This journalistic norm involves defining balance as providing "two sides" to a story, which critics argue can simplify or distort nuanced realities.

200

What is the "Only Yes is Yes" Act (Solo Sí es Sí)?

Triggered by the "Wolf Pack" case and subsequent public agenda shifts, this 2022 Spanish law eliminated the distinction between sexual abuse and assault.

300

What are Echo Chambers (or Filter Bubbles)?

Often driven by algorithms, these are "enclosed epistemic circles" where individuals communicate only with like-minded people, reinforcing pre-existing beliefs.

300

Who is Jürgen Habermas?

This key theorist's 1962 work, The Structural Transformation of the Public Sphere, defined the public sphere as a space between the state and private life for rational debate.

300

What is Malevolent Leader Imagery?

A 1967 study in Appalachia found that children in poverty held this type of imagery regarding political leaders, viewing them as untrustworthy or harmful.

300

What is Advocacy Journalism?

Robert Entman distinguishes between traditional journalism and this type, which explicitly promotes a particular cause or ideological agenda.

300

What is the Programmatic Phase?

This is the fourth phase in the structured process of public opinion formation, where concrete policies or programs are actually developed.

400

What is "Liquid" communication?

Borrowing from sociologist Zygmunt Bauman, this term describes the fluid, unstable, and constantly shifting nature of digital communication today.

400

Who is Katherine Cramer?

Beyond simple aggregation, this researcher used face-to-face conversations in rural settings to find how citizens use social identities to make sense of politics.

400

What is the Spread-of-Scores methodology?

In multiparty systems, this specific mathematical formula is used to measure affective polarization by calculating the square root of the sum of squared differences in party ratings.

400

What is the Two-Step Flow Theory?

This theory suggests media influence moves from news outlets to "opinion leaders" before reaching the less-attentive general public.

400

What is Gender Realignment Theory?

Ronald Inglehart and Pippa Norris used this theory to explain the shift from women voting conservatively to women supporting left-wing parties in the "modern" era

500

What represents 37%?

In the digital age, this percentage of 18-29 year olds in the U.S. regularly gets their news specifically from social media news influencers.

500

Who is E.E. Schattschneider?

 In a famous critique of the pluralist intermediary system, this scholar observed that the "heavenly chorus" of interest groups "sings with a strong upper-class accent"

500

What is the square root?

To measure affective polarization in complex multiparty systems, researchers use a formula that requires taking this specific mathematical value of the sum of squared differences between a person's rating of each party and their average rating.

500

What is The People's Choice?

his landmark 1948 study of the 1944 U.S. presidential election provided the empirical foundation for "Minimal Effects Theory" by finding that media rarely converts voters to the opposing side.

500

Who are "anti-woke" conservatives?

Within the MAGA coalition, researchers identify this specific subgroup—making up 21% of the coalition—as being defined primarily by their opposition to progressivism rather than strong ideological conviction.