- Sound bite
A sound bite is an audiolinguistic and social communications phenomenon whose nature was recognized in the late 20th century, helped by people such as
Marshall McLuhan . It is characterized by a short phrase or sentence that deftly captures the essence of what the speaker is trying to say. Such key moments in dialogue (or monologue) stand out better in the audience's memory and thus become the "taste" that best represents the entire "meal" of the larger message or conversation. Sound bites are a natural consequence of people placing ever greater emphasis on summarizing ever-increasing amounts of information in their lives.In
film andbroadcasting , a sound bite is a very short piece of aspeech taken from a longer speech or aninterview in which someone withauthority or the average "man on the street" says something which is considered by those who edit the speech or interview to be the most important point.As the context of what is being said is missing, the insertion of sound bites into news broadcasts or documentaries is open to
manipulation and thus requires a very high degree ofjournalistic ethics . According to theCode of Ethics of theSociety of Professional Journalists , journalists should "make certain that headlines, news teases and promotional material, photos, video, audio, graphics, sound bites and quotations do not misrepresent. They should not oversimplify or highlight incidents out of context." [ [http://www.icij.org/Content.aspx?context=about&topic=ethics&id=705 The Center for Public Integrity-Journalistic Ethics ] ]Politician s of the new generation are carefully coached by their spin doctors to produce on-demand sound bites which are clear and to the point. The term is sometimes written incorrectly (or ironically) as "sound byte".It is also the name of a book by Franz Ferdinand frontman
Alex Kapranos .Historical sound bites
Classic examples of sound bites include
Ronald Reagan 's demand that "Mr. Gorbachev,tear down this wall !" in reference to the increasing social pressure to remove theBerlin Wall . In this context, the well-delivered sound bite serves as a cultural icon that others are likely to know about.More sound bites include:
* "The only thing we have to fear is - "fear itself"." (the most famous phrase inFranklin D. Roosevelt 's firstInaugural Address in 1933)
* "Yesterday, December 7, 1941, a date which will live in infamy....." (the opening phrase of Franklin D. Roosevelt's speech declaring war onJapan the day afterPearl Harbor had been attacked)
*"Ask not what your country can do for you. Ask what you can do for your country." (the most famous phrase inJohn F. Kennedy 's Inaugural Address in 1961)
* "Houston,Tranquility Base here. The Eagle has landed." In one succinct phrase, the entire Apollo Moon program was culminated.
* "Houston, we've had a problem." (said by James A. Lovell in the Apollo XIII mission)
* "", delivered by United States presidential candidateGeorge H. W. Bush
* "Senator, you are no Jack Kennedy ." said byLloyd Bentsen as a retort toDan Quayle 's comparison of himself to Jack Kennedy in terms of political experience
* "I feel the hand of history upon our shoulders" —Tony Blair following the 1998Good Friday agreement . Blair had just commented that "A day like today, it's not a day for soundbites: we can leave those at home". [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/programmes/politics_show/3242648.stm]There was also a news agency called "SoundByte News" in the early era of personal computers.
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Non-denial denial
*Buzzword
*Media clip
*Video clip
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