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MASS MEDIA

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Title: MASS MEDIA


1
MASS MEDIA
2
Youtube clip American Psycho
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vIXlkq9vHuAEfeature
    related

3
The Power of MEDIA
  • Media Effects
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vqvgURfZMGoQ
  • Power of Media
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vxmtd9o6ZWZM
  • Power of Social Media
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?v5mid8p4A6Eg

4
CANADIAN VS. US TV WATCHING
  • AVERAGE WEEKLY VIEWING (hours mins)

Persons 2736 3412 Men 18 2730
3444 Women 18 3018 3846 Teens (12-17)
2136 2350 Children (2-11) 2130
2559 - From TV Bureau of Canada, 2012
5
RECEPTIVITY TO ADSACROSS MEDIA TYPES
  • Watching Television 58.8
  • On the Internet 12.6
  • Reading a Newspaper 11.2
  • Listening to the Radio 8.6
  • Reading a Magazine 2.7
  • Out of Home 2.3
  • -Survey conducted by BBM Analytics, 2011

6
Innerscope Research Media Effectiveness Study
  • observed 100 male and female participants aged
    18-49 as they experienced the advertising of 24
    national brands within the following media
    environments
  • TV ads were viewed within a 30-minute episode of
    Two and a Half Men
  • Radio ads were heard while listening to 15
    minutes of Toronto's CHUM FM during a virtual
    drive
  • Online ads were viewed while surfing msn.ca for
    15 minutes
  • Newspaper ads were viewed while reading the
    Vancouver Sun's Life section for 30 minutes

7
METHOD OF STUDY
  • The study biometrically measured consumers'
    unconscious emotional responses, captured with a
    lightweight wireless vest that monitors skin
    sweat, heart rate, respiration and movement.
  • Eye tracking and measures of intensity and
    synchrony were condensed and analyzed to
    determine moment-by-moment, as well as overall,
    emotional engagement.

8
RESULTS
  • ADVERTISEMENTS WATCHED
  • ON TELEVISION PRODUCED
  • 3 X higher emotional engagement and three times
    higher aided next-day recall than radio ads.
  • 1.8 X higher emotional engagement and 1.4 times
    higher aided next-day recall than online video
    ads.
  • 5 X higher aided next-day recall than online
    display ads.
  • 5.5 X more total emotional engagement and
    comparable aided next-day recall than newspaper
    ads.

9
  • The mass media refer to print, radio,
    television, and other communication technologies.
    Mass implies that the media reach many people.
    Media signifies that communication does not
    take place directly through face-to-face
    interaction. Instead, technology intervenes or
    mediates in transmitting messages from senders to
    receivers. Furthermore, communication via the
    mass media is usually one-way, or at least
    one-sided. There are few senders (or producers)
    and many receivers (or audience members).

10
  • 1450 Printing press (Gutenberg)
  • 1702 First daily newspaper (London Daily
    Courant)
  • 1833 First mass circulation newspaper (New York
    Sun)
  • 1837 Photography (Daguerre)
  • 1840 Telegraphy (Morse)
  • 1875 Telephone (Bell)
  • 1895 Movies (Lumiére)
  • 1906 Radio
  • 1941 Commercial TV
  • 1948 Long playing records
  • 1952 VCR
  • 1961 Cable TV
  • 1969 ARPANET (US Dept of Defense)
  • 1975 Microcomputer (Apple)
  • 1983 Cell phone
  • 1989 World Wide Web (Berners-Lee)

11
CANADIAN INTERNET USE
12
Why the Mass Media Grew
  • The Protestant Reformation promoted literacy.
  • Democratic movements promoted mass involvement.
  • Capitalist industrialization promoted the search
    for profit.

13
Theories of Media Effects
  • Functionalist (coordination, social control,
    socialization, entertainment)
  • Conflict (legitimation of injustice and
    inequality, source of profit)
  • Symbolic interactionist (audience interpretation)
  • Feminist (under- and misrepresentation of women
    and other minorities)

14
SOCIAL CONTROL
  • SOCIAL CONTROL the social mechanisms that
    regulate individual and group behavior, leading
    to conformity and compliances to the rules of a
    given nation or culture

15
Jerry Springer Social Control
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vW_334td7t5I

16
Theories of Media Effects
  • Functionalist (coordination, social control,
    socialization, entertainment)
  • Conflict (legitimation of injustice and
    inequality, source of profit)
  • Symbolic interactionist (audience interpretation)
  • Feminist (under- and misrepresentation of women
    and other minorities)

17
Canadas Media Giants, 2007
  • CTVGlobeMedia (BCE and Thomson, Toronto,
    4.3b/yr CTV, Globe and Mail, TSN, major urban
    radio stations)
  • Rogers (Rogers, Toronto, 3.9b/yr cable TV, ISP,
    29 radio stations, 62 magazines, Sportsnet, Blue
    Jays)
  • CanWest Global (Asper, Winnipeg, 2.9b/yr Global
    TV, National Post ,10 major urban dailies)
  • Shaw (Shaw, Calgary, 2.8b/yr Cable TV, ISP, 49
    radio stations, etc.)
  • CBC (public, Toronto, 1.6b/yr CBC-TV,
    Radio-Canada)
  • Quebecor (Péladeau, Montreal, 1.0b/yr Sun
    newspapers, major Quebec newspapers, cable TV,
    etc.)

18
Global Media Giants, 2007 (rank and annual
revenue)
  • Rank and name US b
  • AOL Time Warner (U.S.) 46.5
  • Disney (U.S.) 35.5
  • Comcast (U.S.) 30.9
  • Vivendi Universal (France) 29.6
  • News Corp. (U.S./Australia) 28.7
  • Bertelsmann (Germany) 25.7

19
CONFLICT THEORY
  • 3 MEDIA BIASING MECHANISMS
  • Advertising
  • Sourcing
  • Flak

20
Audience Reaction to Pro-Choice TV Dramas
  • Pro-life women from all social classes think
    abortion is never justified and reject the mass
    medias justifications for abortion.
  • Pro-choice working-class women who think of
    themselves as members of the working class adopt
    a pro-choice stand as a survival strategy, not on
    principle.
  • Pro-choice working-class women who aspire to
    middle-class status distance themselves from the
    reckless members of their own class who sought
    abortions on the TV shows.
  • Pro-choice middle-class women believe that only
    an individual womans feelings can determine
    whether abortion is right or wrong in her own
    case.

21
Youtube video
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vkWuOVAWyKwQ
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?v9_JpYfScoHsfeature
    related

22
Summary of the Four Theories
  • Functionalism identifies the main social effects
    of the mass media coordination, socialization,
    social control, and entertainment. By performing
    these functions, the mass media help make social
    order possible.
  • Conflict theory offers a qualification. As vast
    moneymaking machines controlled by a small group
    of increasingly wealthy people, the mass media
    contribute to economic inequality and maintaining
    the core values of a stratified social order.
  • Interpretive approaches offer a second
    qualification audience members filter,
    interpret, resist, and sometimes reject media
    messages according to our own interests and
    values.
  • Feminist approaches offer a third qualification.
    They highlight the misrepresentation of women and
    members of racial minorities in the mass media.
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