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=== Journalism === Newspaper companies all over the world are trying to embrace the new phenomenon by implementing its practices in their work. While some have been slow to come around, other major newspapers like ''[[The New York Times]]'', ''[[USA Today]],'' and ''[[The Washington Post]]'' are setting a precedent for the positioning of the newspaper industry in a globalized world. To keep up with the changing world of multimedia, journalistic practices are adopting and utilizing different multimedia functions through the inclusion of visuals such as varying audio, video, text, etc. in their writings.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Pincus |first1=Hanna |last2=Wojcieszak |first2=Magdalena |last3=Boomgarden |first3=Hajo |title=Do Multimedia Matter? Cognitive and Affective Effects of Embedded Multimedia Journalism |journal=Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly |date=September 2017 |volume=94 |issue=3 |pages=747–771 |doi=10.1177/1077699016654679 |s2cid=148407202 }}</ref> [[File:Raadioajakirjaniku töövahendid- mikrofon ja makk..jpg|thumb|journalism]] News reporting is not limited to traditional media outlets. Freelance journalists can use different new media to produce multimedia pieces for their news stories. It engages global audiences and tells stories with technology, which develops new communication techniques for both media producers and consumers. The Common Language Project, later renamed [[The Seattle Globalist]], is an example of this type of multimedia journalism production. Multimedia reporters who are mobile (usually driving around a community with cameras, audio and video recorders, and laptop computers) are often referred to as [[Mojo (mobile journalist)|mojos]], or ''mobile ''journalists.
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