Abstract
This qualitative study presents findings from in-depth interviews conducted with US foreign correspondents based in France in 1998 and in 2010. This longitudinal research investigated differences in the sociodemographic profiles of an elite group of reporters and attempted to discern the evolution of journalistic practices at two distinct time periods. Results suggested an overall waning elitism among correspondents, an erosion of Paris’s international news value for US media, as well as the deontological threat posed by the Internet for a comprehensive and thorough foreign coverage. Overall, through the longitudinal analysis of Paris-based correspondents, this study presents the gradual neglect of France by American media.
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