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Published byLydia Atkinson Modified over 9 years ago
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The Media Chapter 6
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USA Today
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The Wall Street Journal
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The New York Times
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National Enquirer
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Time
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Newsweek
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US News & World Report
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Alternative Newsmagazines
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Radio Larger audience More entertainment value Personality-based & immediate 1933: FDR’s first “fireside chat” 1937: Hindenburg explosion
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Television 1960: in 87% of US households Reshapes the political landscape 1980: CNN (Turner) begins 24-hr news 1996: Fox News (Murdoch) makes it visually appealing, begins “news” empire 1960 Presidential Debate
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24-hr Cable News
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Gov’t Regulation of the Media Federal Radio Act (1927) – Created licensing of radio stations (public airwaves) Federal Communications Commission est. 1934 – independent federal agency that regulates radio, television, telegraph, cable & satellite transmission Telecommunications Act of 1996 – Relaxed/scrapped limitations on media ownership – Consolidation of broadcast, telephone & cable – Lifted rate regulations for cable systems
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Regulation of Content Fairness Doctrine – Broadcasters must provide fair coverage of all views on public issues Equal opportunities rule – Broadcasters must make equal time available (same circumstances) to all political candidates Reasonable access rule: – Broadcasters must make their facilities available (to all responsible elements in the community) to express conflicting views
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Functions of the Media Hard News – Serious & timely events that warrant coverage Soft News / infotainment – Information & diversion focused on personalities or celebrities…usually unrelated to public affairs or policy Yellow Journalism – Sensationalistic, irresponsible journalism – “The Yellow Kid” from the NY World – Glen Beck Example Glen Beck Example
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Reporting the News News – important event that has happened within the past 24 hours White House Press Corps – Reporters regularly assigned to cover the president (~7000 reporters) Press Secretary – Represents the White House before the media – Currently: Josh Earnest – Daily Show: White House Press Secretary Job Description 2005 Daily Show: White House Press Secretary Job Description 2005
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Interpreting & Presenting the News Gatekeepers – media executives, news editors, and prominent reporters who direct the flow of news Sound Bite – Brief statement of no longer than a few seconds used on a radio or television broadcast Horse race journalism – election coverage by the mass media that focuses on which candidate is ahead rather than on national issues. Media events – Events so “newsworthy” that the media are compelled to cover it
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Sound Bites Politicians and other public figures now write speeches to accommodate this trend. Short sound bites means less analysis & explanation!
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Setting the Political Agenda Political agenda – List of issues that need government attention Muckraker – Journalist, author or filmmaker who investigates & exposes societal issues… often sensationalistic
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Evaluating the Media Bias – Inclination or preference that interferes with impartial judgment – Two sides of the bias argument: a) Reporters are said to have a liberal bias b) Media owners have a conservative bias Spin – Particular viewpoint or bias; slant Watchdog journalism – press scrutiny of public and business; investigating & publicizing misconduct Attack journalism – press coverage that questions the character or qualifications of a public official
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Ownership Media Ownership – 1983: 50 corps own a majority of media outlets – Today: 7 corps own a majority of media outlets – http://www.corporations.org/media/ http://www.corporations.org/media/ – (TV Funhouse video) Interlocking Directorates – http://www.fair.org/index.php?page=2870 http://www.fair.org/index.php?page=2870
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1980s: Business & media deregulation begins 1996: Telecommunication Act relaxed limits
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