Chapter Two: Media Theory
Media economics Economies of Scale Mass production and distribution First copy costs Low marginal costs
Ownership patterns What is the market structure? Monopoly: One producer Oligopoly: A few producers Competition: Many producers
Monopoly - Oligopoly - Competition
What is a firm’s market power? Smaller competitor? Monopoly? Economic monopoly Monopoly on information Oligopoly? Shares dominance
Market Structure Examples Local Telephone Long Distance Cable Music Software Monopoly Oligopoly Competition
The profit motive Making a profit Entry costs how high is the barrier?
Sources of media revenue From consumers, to Taxes, donations, subsidies Consumer goods purchases Retail media distributors Communications media, via subscriptions
Sources of media revenue Selling the audience Direct sales Rentals Subscriptions
More sources of media revenue Usage fees Advertising Syndication Copyright royalty fees Public subsidies access fees, universal service fees
From mass markets to market segments Narrowcasting Identification of specialized interests Relies on information technologies demographics profiling IT lowers costs of production and distribution
Diffusion of Innovations Explains the spreading of new ways of doing things in a social system observability trialability compatability affordability supervening social necessity
Diffusion of innovations
Approaches to Media – Critical Studies Looks for relationships between The media system Media content Audiences for media Culture
Approaches to Media – Political economy Politics, Economics and Communication intertwined Focus on interests Power relationships Advertising who’s selling; what’s being sold Commercial interests and ownership Ideology
Hegemony An underlying consensus of ideology that favors a system that serves the interests of a dominant social group Economic system preserves the interests of the ruling classes Mitigating factors: Consumer needs, laws of supply and demand
Approaches to Media – Agenda Setting The ability of the media to determine what is important OJ Simpson and US race relations Activism and media event creation Political “horse race”
Approaches to Media – Gatekeeping and Framing Gatekeeping: deciding what will appear in the media Does a media message make it through the gate? Who are the gatekeepers? Framing: writing to tell stories What makes the story? What is left out? 2 sides to every issue?
Approaches to Media – Opinion Leaders People who try to influence media coverage (agendas & frames) Diverse interests spin doctors Lobbying groups Special interests, business constituencies
Approaches to Media – Textual Criticism Electronic media as a new kind of “text” Apply tradition of literary or cultural criticism Genre studies Semiotic analyses Feminist, Gay/Lesbian, Race studies
The active audience The media and audiences are both powerful Media creators have a preferred reading
Approaches to Media – Societal Functions Functions of the mass media surveillance interpretation socialization entertainment Functions of new communications media
Approaches to Media – Social Learning Theory Explains media consumption behavior in terms of Expectations about consumption Cognition, or how we learn through our own experiences “Uses and Gratifications”