Theory & the Media Professional Stephen Hill. Objectives Does the proliferation of web 2.0 user generated content and affordable creative technologies.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Broadcast Connect Generate to the Worldyour Communities traffic & Revenue.
Advertisements

Reality TV and Media Convergence
Course Overview. Learning Objectives To examine the role of the media in todays society. To look at social, economic, political and historical contexts.
The World of Advertising and Integrated Brand Promotion
Reading The Media: One of the 21 st Century Literacy Skills Frank Baker media educator Media Literacy Clearinghouse
1 Write as many CONVENTIONS of film trailers you can think of. 2 Now write a list of conventions of your film genre. How do we differentiate the lists?
Unlocking… Module C: Texts & Society Elective 1: The Global Village Prescribed Text: Nick Enright’s A Man with Five Children.
Mass Media and Popular Culture The Study of How the Media Constructs Reality: Do Barbie & Ken have feelings too?
Technological Convergence for Institutions & Audiences
Media og kommunikation The Media Book – chapter 1 Theory in Media Research.
Changing Media1 Children in the avant-garde of media development Discussion: Four dimensions –Technologies –Institutions –Texts –Audiences ‘Power’ of media.
© 2004 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill Intercultural Communication in Contexts Third Edition Judith N. Martin and Thomas.
Online Advertising & PPC (Pay Per click). What is advertising?  Advertising is a (usually paid) placement or promotion of a product in a public arena.
1-1 Copyright  2012 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd PowerPoint Slides t/a Advertising and Promotion 2e by Belch, Belch, Kerr & Powell Chapter 1 Where marketing.
Course Components Unit 1 : Investigating Media – 50% of total AS mark Unit 1 : Investigating Media – 50% of total AS mark This will focus on developing.
Mass Media. A visual explanation  ZhAk ZhAk.
Outside Influences Work History Home site map Education Relevant Courses Here’s a Snap Shot Extensive work in large groups Effectively maintained and managed.
What is Multimedia? Multimedia is a combination of text, art, sound, animation, and video. It is delivered to the user by electronic or digitally manipulated.
Web 2.0 Technologies for Online & Hybrid Teaching WORLDS COLLIDE Linda W. Friedman Associate Dean, Zicklin School of Business Professor of Statistics &
Changes in the Markets Changes in the Technologies therefore Changes in the Publishing Industry New Business Models in a rapidly evolving World Robert.
1 Copyright © 2012 McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All right reversed McGraw-Hill/Irwin An Introduction to Integrated Marketing Communications.
SOCIOLOGICAL THEORY: MARXISM.
FORMATS, PLATFORMS, CROSS-OVERS.  The yearning for intimacy = broadcast television as bringing private and public space together  Broadcast –to sow,
Digital Mass Media. What is New Media? Today we are in the middle of a new media revolution – the shift of all culture to computer-mediated forms of production,
Culture as an Economic Factor in the development of the city Geoffrey Brown
Creating Media Smart Students: Media Literacy for 21 st C Learning Frank W. Baker Media Literacy Clearinghouse
Social media is no longer a choice but a necessity.
POSTMODERNISM Owen, Rachel, Mary, Jessica, Ty, Elvira.
CHAPTER 6 NEW MEDIA – NEW THEORY?. DISCUSSING NEW MEDIA When is new theory needed? Fundamental changes in forms of social organization of the media technlogies.
Marketing Management 13 th of June Communicating Customer Value Integrated Marketing Communications Strategy.
Lecture 10 Cultural dimension of globalisation. Cultural globalisation Cultural G means intensification and expansion of cultural flows across the globe.
The Media Landscape… Not just what we watch, listen, play information society: the exchange of information is the predominant economic activity. Producing,
Introduction to Mass Media HISTORY INDUSTRY CONTROVERSY.
CONFIDENTIAL Delivering Creative Future 19th July 2006.
AS Media Studies. **Key Term** Institution  The organisation or company that produces and/or distributes media.  An institution is formed by the relations.
Theory & the Media Professional Stephen Hill. Objectives AIM: To explore the ways that academic media theory can help the media professional understand.
INDUSTRIAL MEDIA & SOCIAL MEDIA What are they and why is literacy important?
CHALLENGES AND OPPORTUNITIES OF ONLINE JOURNALISM BY ABER MAURINE 11/U/7930/PS.
Multimedia By: Marcus Bobian Multimedia period 1.
COM 215 Media History.  Defining New Media  Affordances and Uses of New Media  Media Convergence  Break  Defining Culture OUTLINE.
Evaluation of Digital Technology
Media Influence sac revision. Susceptible audience: audience that is easily influenced by the media: children, elderly, mentally ill Codes or practice:
Broadcasting: Concepts and Contexts Chris Gilgallon.
What representation is not… Media instantaneously planting images and thoughts in our heads.
Importance of media language Every medium has its own ‘language’ – or combination of languages – that it uses to communicate meaning. Television, for example,
1.What is meant by “convergence”? 2.What is meant by “synergy”? 3.What is meant by “proliferation”? 4.What is meant by “globalisation”? 5.What makes illegal.
G325: Critical Perspectives in Media A2 Media Studies.
CHAPTER 6 NEW MEDIA – NEW THEORY?. DISCUSSING NEW MEDIA When is new theory needed? Fundamental changes in forms of social organization of the media technlogies.
> MS4: Text, Industry & Audience Exam: 15th June 2010 (2.5 hrs)
Johansen Quijano University of Texas Arlington English Department Transmedia Storytelling.
COM 327 January 17, 2013 Encoding / Decoding 1.Quiz 2.Unit overview 3.Stuart Hall & cultural studies 4.Group work: Close reading 5.Encoding/decoding in.
S6 Media Production Introduction to Media Studies.
Chapter One: Chapter One: Changing Media Environment.
Chapter 1 Mass Communication: A Critical Approach.
Topic 2: New media, globalisation & popular culture Key Issues: What is the ‘new media’? Characteristics of the ‘new media’ Who is using the ‘new media’?
The Impact of New Media A Level Media Studies. Key Questions Has new media democratised the production of media texts by shifting the control of media.
Objective % Describe the core concepts of digital media and relationship between digital media, society, and industry certifications.
Mass Communication: A Critical Approach
Learning Objective To understand theories associated with the representation by the media.
Media og kommunikation
MEDIA STUDIES A2 Everything we know so far…
Mass Communication: A Critical Approach
Independent Case Study
Social Media And Global Computing New Media and New Technologies
GCSE Media Studies.
Objective Describe the core concepts of digital media and relationship between digital media, society, and industry certifications.
SAMPLE ASSESSMENT MATERIALS: EXAMS
Advertising and Promotion: An Integrated Marketing Communications Approach Chris Hackley Chapter 1 Introduction.
QUESTION 1B The list of concepts to which questions will relate is as follows: • Genre • Narrative • Representation • Audience • Media language.
Presentation transcript:

Theory & the Media Professional Stephen Hill

Objectives Does the proliferation of web 2.0 user generated content and affordable creative technologies pose a threat to the integrity of the media professional? LINK TO THEORY (MARXISM): Does the deregulation of the means of production' (Karl Marx, 1848) pose a threat to the integrity of the media professional? AIM: To explore the ways that academic media theory can help the media professional understand the interactive potential of the audience in a digital age. To explore how three classic theories of audience might help answer the question:

Overview Forms and Conventions Audience Institution Representation Three Theories of Audience 1.Roland Barthes – Death of the Author (1967) 2.Dick Hebdige – Subculture (1979) 3.Chris Anderson – The Long Tail (2006) Does the proliferation of web 2.0 and affordable creative technologies pose a threat to the integrity of the media professional? How academic media theory can help the professional understand the interactive potential of the audience in a digital age. Five Institutional Models 1. Music Video Production (Foundation Degree Popular Music) 2. Multi-media Journalism (BA Hons Journalism and Communication) 3. Advertising and Marketing (BA Hons Marketing and Communication) 4. Television Production (BA Hons Media Production) 5. Computer Animation (BA Hons Computer Animation)

The Media Theory Timeline Forms and Conventions Audience Institution Representation Roland Barthes Death of the Author (1967) Dick Hebdige Subculture: The Meaning of Style (1979) Chris Anderson The Long Tail (2006)...

Roland Barthes, Death of the Author (1967) Forms and Conventions Audience Institution Representation Contemporary Relevance: Web 2.0 user generated content is blurring distinction between producers and consumers. Influence on: Stuart Hall – Encoding/ Decoding (1973) Influenced by: Ferdinand de Saussure – Cours de Linguistic (1912) The Big Idea: The meaning of a text is inscribed by the audience who essentially re-write it. The reader becomes an author rendering the real author dead.

Dick Hebdige, Subculture: The Meaning of Style (1979) Forms and Conventions Audience Institution Representation Contemporary Relevance: With the proliferation of digital technology and multi-platform branding, niche markets and defined communities of consumers are the key to profitability across media platforms e.g EMAPs Kerrang! The Big Idea: Subcultural audiences construct their identity by using material objects as symbols of group belonging e.g Punks and safety pins. These objects become ideologically loaded and stable signs in their own right. Influenced by: Jean Baudrillard – The Consumer Society (1970). Influence on: Stuart Ewan – All Consuming Images (1987).

Chris Anderson, The Long Tail, 2006 Forms and Conventions Audience Institution Representation Contemporary Relevance: The future of Media industries is selling more of less. For example, BBC received 4.7% of funding though it only has 1.8% of BBC1s audience – its niche market programming can be sold on more easily. Excess capacity in schedule = mother of invention? Influence on: Too early to say. Influenced by: Vance Packard - The Hidden Persuaders (1957) The Big Idea: The fragmentation of media audiences into niche markets has transformed patterns of media consumption. Combined with the marketing and distribution possibilities created by the Internet, possibilities have now opened up for the profitability of fringe creative industries.

Music Video Forms and Conventions Audience Institution Representation Impact on professional: destabilised the relationship between producers and consumers. Barthes: The interpretation of the musical soundtrack by the video director exemplifies the authorial tension in Death of an Author. Hebdige: Sub-cultural codes that denote particular niche market have become central to the visual style of music videos aimed at defined communities of consumers. Anderson: Multi-platform branding has seen the emergence of some very specialised markets for music video: Smash Hits TV, Q TV, Kerrang! TV etc Foundation Degree - Popular Music Digital age: audience embracing cheap digital video editing software and YouTube Traditional view: Music videos are the ultimate example of the post-modern text. Prospects for future: reinstated some of the key conventions of the genre.

Multi-Media Journalism Forms and Conventions Audience Institution Representation Barthes: questions the truth of objective reporting. Meaning of news inscribed by the audience. Hebdige: Lifestyle journalism cohered around sub-cultural niche markets: Angling Times to Living in France Anderson: Traditional journalism increasingly fragmented – specialist television news channels etc. BA Hons Journalism and Communication Digital age: Traditional journalism competing with blogs, message boards, Amazon reviews, forums etc. Impact on professional: boundaries blurred between current affairs and entertainment. Traditional view: press as the Fourth Estate (Peter Wright/David Kelly) Prospects for future: multi-platform branding of old- guard. High quality journalistic = niche market

Television Production Forms and Conventions Audience Institution Representation Traditional view: Concept of broadcasting. Tension between paternalistic sensibility of BBC and populist awareness of independent channels has been replaced by narrowcasting. The schedule has been replaced by TV on demand. Barthes: Interactivity means audiences are now the authors of their own viewing schedule. Hebdige: Narrowcasting to sub-cultural groups has replaced broadcasting. Anderson: Lower production costs and increased channel numbers means minority television production is now profitable. BA Hons Media Production Digital age: Narrow casting. Multi-channelling. Greater audience interactivity (pressing the red button) + convergence Impact on professional: More television being made more cheaply, less freedom about its content. Reality television placing greater emphasis on audience participation. Prospects for future: YouTube, reality television reinforce old conventions. More sophisticated audience more receptive to hybridity.

Computer Animation Forms and Conventions Audience Institution Representation Traditional view: animation discrete genre of film-making - 19 th Century (flip books and zoetropes). Barthes: Animation supposes authorial creativity on the part of the audience in the form of the willing suspension of disbelief. Hebdige: Animation is a discrete sub-culture of the film industry with its own sub-genres. Anderson: Proliferation of New Media technologies has opened new niche markets for software and animation based film. BA Hons Computer Animation Digital age: Proliferation of anime. Domestic packages like GIF Movie Gear allowing audiences to produce their own animation for broadcast on YouTube Impact on professional: Convergence of animation with special effects in mainstream film is opening up new cinematic possibilities. Prospects for future: Amateur productions e.g Anime pop music videos widening audiences for animation films.

Conclusion Forms and Conventions Audience Institution Representation Roland Barthes, Death of the Author, The shift is irrelevant. The audience has always been in procession of the means of production in the way in which they inscribe meaning into the reception of a text; creative media technologies are an extension of this. To explore how three classic media theories of audience might help answer the question: Does the proliferation of web 2.0 and affordable creative technologies pose a threat to the integrity of the media professional? Dick Hebdige, Subculture and the Meaning of Style, The output of the media professional is always open to appropriation by subcultural groups who will re-work its meaning. Moreover subversive readings are always dependent on the hegemony of the media professional and thereby reinforce it. Chris Anderson, The Long Tail, 2006 Much of the creativity is fairly illusory. Though products may be niche marketed most domestic technologies reinforce the conventions of the dominant means of production. Long tail opens up new opportunities.