In my youth an editorial was put in a package at the end, if there was time.
I assume you're talking TV. I've seen very few TV news programs do actual editorials expressing views on anything more than hooray for mothers and the 4th of July--mainly because if they actually said something controversial as an editorial, it might 1) tick off viewers and advertisers, so that the station's ratings and income might drop, 2)generate written complaints to the feds that station management will have to explain when they get their air time renewed, 3) force them to give free air time to someone who wants to express an opposing view.
True editorials are generally confined to the editorial pages of newspapers.
Now it's every anchorman for himself just spewing his views and yelling into the camera. I don't like Nancy Grace for this reason.
But Nancy Grace is
not an anchorman--or even an anchorwoman, in the original concept of one who anchors a news team by reading reporter's articles on the air. What the British more logically call "newsreaders."
Grace and Geraldo and many of the other talking heads on Fox and CNN talk shows are lawyers who never covered a real news beat in their lives, couldn't write a news story for love or money, and wouldn't recognize news if it kicked them in the butt. They're just the barking dogs of television hired for their entertainment, not their news, value. They say outrageous things to get rubes mad enough to watch and call in. If Hitler or Stalin were still alive, they'd be hosting one of those call in shows right now.
You wouldn't watch Jerry Springer for the news, would you? Grace and Geraldo and Bill are the same thing, just with pretensions of sophistication. Same thing goes for Larry King, who refuses to read up and prepare in advance for his guests because he wants it all to be "spontaneous." That's why some of his guests make the most outrageous claims without him ever challenging them.
Like it or dislike it as you will. But don't call it journalism or "news." Have you ever seen anyone on television actually break a major story like newspaper reporters do?
First lesson in journalism: don't editorialize, the people don't want to know your opinion, they just want the news.
Exactly--that's still the rule for real reporters. But don't confuse us news hounds with the people who write columns in the newspaper, in which expressing personal opinion is perfectly acceptable for columnists, or the people who write editorials on the editorial page that express the newspaper's official stand on some issue. Three very different types of writers who often do not share even the same work space at a newspaper.
On TV and radio, any time you find someone on a program that's named for him or her and who is always telling you what they think and what you should feel, that's the TV equivalent of a columnist--but more like a televised "reality" show rather than a newspaper column.
Rather than a station or network announcing its management's stand on any issue or endorsing a candidate, you're more likely to get a written or spoken disclaimer to the effect that "the views expressed are that of the people on this program and do not necessarily reflect this station's opinion or policy."
Just curious, r3port3r66: you say you majored in journalism and interned with some online thingy, while Tramps says he teaches media. Have either of you ever earned a living as a news reporter?