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Published byKerry Edward Singleton Modified over 9 years ago
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Unit 3, Notes 3 THE FORMATION OF PUBLIC OPINION
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Public Opinion – suggests that most American are of the same viewpoints, opinion on a particular subject Example: public opinion of Britney Spears Politicians say “the people” want this or that assuming the public holds same opinion But its not that easy, public actually agrees on very little Most issues don’t capture the attention of all Americans especially in government Probably find more people who have an opinion on on Brittany than on economy So public opinion should be about public affairs… events that concern many people So public opinion then should be… attitudes held by significant number of people on matters of government PUBLIC OPINION
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Family and Education Where we learn our public opinions Starts first at home this is where we hear our parents/guardians, political socializations starts here Influences a child’s attitude toward government, race, religion, etc. School Start of school begins to break influence of family Children are taught at school to respect flag, founding fathers and love for country PUBLIC OPINION, CONT.
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Mass Media Means of communication that reach large number at same time Radio, TV, Internet, newspapers Influence our opinions Peer Groups Influence friends, coworkers Opinion Leaders Any person who has strong influence on views of others Celebrities, ministers, gov. leaders OTHER FACTORS
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Ranked in terms of impact on the public 1)Television - reaches the most people (80% of population gets its news this way) - 3 major networks – NBC, CBS, ABC – recently added FOX, CNN, cable news channels - 24 hour news channels make news even more accessible FORMS OF MASS MEDIA
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2) Newspapers – oldest form - newspapers can cover stories in more depth than TV news can - can also present different points of view (editorials) - provide more local news 3) Radio – FDR first major public figure to use it effectively for politics -most only devote a few minutes to news -just the headlines, or entertainment news -larger cities may have some all news channels -talk radio has become increasingly popular FORMS OF MASS MEDIA, CONT.
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4) Magazines – most deal with special interests (ex: Sports Illustrated, Golf Digest, Seventeen) - 3 major news magazines = Time, Newsweek, US News and World Report - can go in depth, but on the issues they choose FORMS OF MASS MEDIA, CONT.
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Media has great affect on politics in two main areas: 1)Sets the public agenda – as they report and talk the media determines what issues people will think and talk about - can focus the public attention on certain issues 2)Electoral Policies – candidates are less dependent on their party to get their word out - with TV, candidates can appeal directly to the people - politicians are very aware of the image the media presents - candidates plan things around TV exposure (Ex: timing, location, what they wear) MEDIA AND POLITICS
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News casts usually feature stories that are short, and show people doing something interesting Show candidates in a soundbite = quick 30-45 second excerpt or sometimes staged report Limits of Media Influence Only a small part of the public pays close enough attention to political events only small part understand what most of the media is talking about Those that do pay attention are selective they choose to pay attention to media sources that support their views TV mostly entertains, radio only “skims” the news Newspapers go in more detail, but most people read the sports or local news MEDIA AND POLITICS, CONT.
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Historic Events Influence public opinion Example: Depression – changed way people viewed government Many more people began to call for more government involvement in life Shift in loyalty from Republican to Democrats War – changes opinion OTHER FACTORS, CONT.
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