news cycle
English
Etymology
US origin, 1920s.[1]
Noun
news cycle (plural news cycles)
- The reporting of a particular media story, or news in general, from the first instance (breaking news) to the last, often including reporting on public and other reactions to the earlier reports, now especially via social media; (originally) the reporting for a particular schedule or deadline in broadcast or print, as in a daily paper.
- 24-hour news cycle
- to dominate the news cycle
- 1998 May, Cullen Murphy, “The Oasis of Memory”, in The Atlantic[1], →ISSN:
- It is not hard, obviously, to discern a nomadic sensibility in the diffusion of such terms as "grazing," "surfing," and "browsing," or in the popularity of books by Bruce Chatwin, or in the way the continuous loop of the twenty-four-hour news cycle has become a unifying social feature.
- 2003, Gerald R. Baron, Now is Too Late: Survival in an Era of Instant News, FT Press, →ISBN, page 69:
- There are some old hands in the public relations business who continue to hold on to the belief (or is it vain hope?) that the media operate around news cycles. For younger readers, I feel compelled to explain what a news cycle is. News cycles operate around deadlines when publications or broadcast news shows operate on a regular schedule. […] Unless it is a huge story, anything coming in after the deadline is going into the next news cycle.
- 2012, Christopher Lehane, Mark Fabiani, Bill Guttentag, Masters of Disaster: The Ten Commandments of Damage Control, St. Martin's Press, →ISBN, page 10:
- The Clinton campaign's fundamental insight was that there were at least three news cycles a day—morning, day, and night—and that a campaign could effectively shape the coverage of the evening news and morning papers by driving a story through all these news cycles and beyond.
- 2015 October 2, Julia Zorthian, “How the O.J. Simpson Verdict Changed the Way We All Watch TV”, in Time[2]:
- The world had followed every turn of the case so closely that the trial would permanently change the news cycle and media patterns. Americans had never been so consumed by a single news story.
- 2020 September 22, John Branch, Brad Plumer, “Climate Disruption Is Now Locked In”, in New York Times[3]:
- The questions are profound and urgent. Can this be reversed? What can be done to minimize the looming dangers for the decades ahead? Will the destruction of recent weeks become a moment of reckoning, or just a blip in the news cycle?
- 2022 April 14, Delia Cai, “Severance, the New York Times’s Twitter Guidelines, and the Forever Illusion of Work-Life Balance”, in Vanity Fair[4]:
- Every other news cycle, when any particular quake related to someone saying something stupid or disagreeable or out of touch or oftentimes simply oversharey occurs, it triggers a recurrent tsunami of contemplation of why any of us in the industry are on the hellsite at all.
- 2025 August 7, Jonathan Lemire, “Things Aren’t Going Donald Trump’s Way”, in The Atlantic[5]:
- There was a time, years ago, when August could be counted as a slow news month in Washington. That’s now a distant memory, in no small part because the current president has an insatiable need to be in the news cycle. […] The aide told me that Trump was looking to intimidate Pyongyang—but that he was also annoyed that he hadn’t been the central storyline on cable news. The bellicose rhetoric worked: Suddenly, Trump had changed the news cycle.
Derived terms
Translations
Translations
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See also
References
- ^ “news cycle”, in Lexico, Dictionary.com; Oxford University Press, 2019–2022.
Further reading
- 24-hour news cycle on Wikipedia.Wikipedia