Rhetorical strategies in secondary news presentation by radio stations in Oyo State, Nigeria

Thumbnail Image

Date

2012

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Department of English, University of Ibadan

Abstract

Secondary gatekeeping—a practice where a news medium selects and broadcasts fragments of the contents of another, primary media—is a novel, but prevalent phenomenon especially in the Nigerian broadcast media. The practice, unlike primary gatekeeping, is yet to receive copious scholarly attention. This study, through a combination of In-depth Interviews and Documentary (Content) Analysis, explored the rationale for newspaper reviews as performed by Radio O-Y-O, Premier FM, and Splash FM, Ibadan, Oyo State, and the delivery strategies employed by presenters of the radio stations. The study is anchored on Monroe’s Motivated Sequence (MMS) as its theoretical framework. Findings show that the radio stations’ rationale for reviewing news contents of newspapers was to achieve increased audience base, gain improved market value, and earn financial profits. Major devices of delivery, aimed at sustaining audience interest, include dramatisation, paraphrasing and suspense, translations, and voice modulation and mimicking.

Description

Keywords

Monroe’s Motivated Sequence, Nigerian Broadcast Media, Radio Stations in Nigeria, Rhetorical Devices, Secondary Gatekeeping

Citation

Collections

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced By