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Published bySharleen Bailey Modified over 9 years ago
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MASS MEDIA Just how much influence should they have…
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Role of the Media in the Political Process
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Key Functions of the Media Entertainment Mass media emphasizes entertainment Popular programs are continued, while programs that receive low ratings are cancelled Informing the Public News Reports- American newspapers have reported political news since the late eighteenth century (ex: The Federalist Papers) Radio and television stations provide their audiences with varying degrees of news programming
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Key Functions of the Media Creation of Political Forums Politicians use the mass media to promote their careers and draw public attention to their issues The president has direct access to the media and is thus able to use it to help set the policy agenda Watchdog, Gatekeeper and Scorekeeper
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Media Influence Gatekeeper: Editors and producers make decisions regarding what is printed or aired. Control access to information Pressures? Advertisers, public, desire for profit, personal bias Limits? Selective exposure or selective perception
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Media as a Linkage Institution Mass Media connects people and communicates public opinion to their government officials interviewing citizens, presenting poll results, and covering protests Connect government officials to the public interviewing political leaders and reporting on government committees and programs
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Presidential Debate http://news.yahoo.com/obama-romney-want- moderator-keep-quiet-next-debate- 035840467.html http://news.yahoo.com/obama-romney-want- moderator-keep-quiet-next-debate- 035840467.html
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The Media and Politics Agenda Setting The policy agenda consists of issues that attract the serious attention of public officials The mass media play an important role in drawing public attention to particular issues Determine what news to cover Play a role in deciding what issues will get national attention and this influence the national agenda
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Candidate-Centered Political Campaigns Political campaigns have become more centered on candidates and less focused on issues 1960- Presidential Debates between Kennedy and Nixon (television replaces newspapers and radio as America’s principal source of political news)
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“The Living Room Candidate” http://www.livingroomcandidate.org/ http://www.livingroomcandidate.org/
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Candidate-Centered Campaigns The mass media contribute to the candidate- centered campaigns in the following ways By replacing speeches and dialogues with sound bites that average just 7.8 seconds in length By focusing on day-to-day campaign activities such as rallies, scandals, gaffes, and negative commercials By engaging in horse-race journalism, which emphasizes how candidates stand in the polls instead of where they stand on the issues
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Candidate Centered Campaigns An election which focuses on the person and not the issues or the political party TV/Media contributions? Image is EXTREMELY important Technical and Advertising strategies become more important than the candidate’s experience or qualifications “marketing strategies”
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Media’s impact on CCC 30 sec spots on news Horse race coverage Scandals Personal lives Debate coverage Convention coverage Primary and caucus coverage
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Candidate Impact on CCC Negative ads Mainstream programs like SNL, Oprah Cable and internet advertising Consultants and “image”
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Current Trends in Modern Media Internet and Cable TV becoming more of a trend with younger voter demographics Article: “Millennial Makeover” Article: “Feeding Frenzy” SNL, Tonight Show, etc. Article: “Strange Bedfellows” Result- growth in the airing of political views but a decline in the objectivity of news delivery
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Current Trends in Modern Media Americans perceptions of political affairs depend on the news sources they follow Lack of a common version of reality Contributed to greater polarization in the nation’s policies Article: “How the Mass Media Divides Us” Consider: Consequences of concentration of ownership of media outlets? Increased similarity in network news coverage
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Media Events Public appearances Photo ops NAME RECOGNITION, public AWARENESS Free advertising Even a negative story is beneficial? Can be detrimental? (The tank ad)
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Television Advertising 60 percent of the campaign budget is spent on advertising 2/3 of political ads are NEGATIVE We market our candidates like toothpaste and deoderant. -Larry Sabato Same advertising agencies “The Living Room Campaign”
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Presidential Communications FDR-”fireside chats” JFK-1 st television president Reagan-”the great communicator” Acting background TV presence/comfort level Choreography/performance attitude
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Print Media Newspapers are declining in circulation NY Times and Washington Post are still influential Concerns? Less informed voters since TV is where most people get their news Only hear “soundbites” which cannot tell the whole story TV reliant on advertising: How does this impact how stories are covered?
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Federal Election Commission Formed in 1934 Responsible for regulating the airwaves (radio, tv) Regulatory examples: Limits number of stations owned by one company Licensing standards (language, content, etc.)
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Cable TV News available 24 hours a day Affect on networks? Selective exposure Narrowcasting - aiming media messages at specific segments of the public defined by values, preferences, demographic attributes More choices available (can that reinforce bias?)
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“Business” of Journalism Privately owned by corporations Investigative journalism Advertisers impact News homogeneous due to many media outlets owned by one Corporation
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Media terms to know Soundbite Less informed Pressure on candidate Context is IMPORTANT and could be misrepresented by the media Leak Intentional: gauge public response and make a decision/form a strategy Unintentional: punishment may follow for the leaker
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