Title: Mass Media
1Mass Media Politics
27.3
Why do news outlets seek to entertain rather than
educate?
- They do try to educate, but they arent
successful at it. - They are motivated by profit.
- They believe education is the job of schools.
- They understand that it is the best way to
present complex issues.
37.3
Why do news outlets seek to entertain rather than
educate?
- They do try to educate, but they arent
successful at it. - They are motivated by profit.
- They believe education is the job of schools.
- They understand that it is the best way to
present complex issues.
4The Medias Functions
- Entertainment
- Reporting the news
- Identifying public problems
- Socializing new generations
- Providing a political forum
- Making profits
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6Reporting the News
- Provides words and pictures about events, facts,
personalities, ideas - Protected by First Amendment
- Meant to keep flow of news as free as possible
- Essential part of democratic process
- Necessary for informed voting decisions
7Identifying Public Problems
- Not only reveals what government is doing
- Also determines what government ought to do
- Gatekeeper influences policy agenda
- Identifies public issues
- Convicted sex offenders in residential
neighborhoods - Influences passage of legislation
- Megans Law
- Presents policy alternatives
- Watchdog uncovers public wrongdoing,
corruption, etc.
87.6
What is an example of the media as watchdog?
- Televising a campaign speech
- Reporting about an abuse of power
- Criticizing a politicians wife
- Polling citizens on an issue
97.6
What is an example of the media as watchdog?
- Televising a campaign speech
- Reporting about an abuse of power
- Criticizing a politicians wife
- Polling citizens on an issue
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11Providing a Political Forum
- Candidates to gain support for campaign
- Officeholders to gain support for policies /
present image of leadership - Presidential trips abroad
- Scorekeeper influences reputations
- How can politicians influence this?
- Press officers release info and try to shape
the news so that it gets the most favorable
attention - Spin control attempt to shape the way an event
is interpreted - Way for citizens to participate in public debate
127.1
How do politicians control their public image?
- Penning articles for Op-Ed pages
- Informal QA sessions with journalists
- Tightly-scripted media events
- Frequent visits to talk shows
137.1
How do politicians control their public image?
- Penning articles for Op-Ed pages
- Informal QA sessions with journalists
- Tightly-scripted media events
- Frequent visits to talk shows
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15Making Profits
- Usually from advertising
- Ad revenue usually related to circulation /
ratings - Reporters may feel pressure from advertisers
- Dillards pulled ads from CBS after 60 Minutes
reported on security guards using racial profiling
16History of Media Politics
- In early U.S. media not as influential as now
- Politics controlled by small elite who
communicated personally - News travelled slowly
- New York ? Philadelphia 5 days
- New York ? Virginia 10 days
- New York ? Boston 15 days
- Growth of print media in 1800s helped unify the
country
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18Popular Press Yellow Journalism
- Post-Civil War mass-based newspapers expressed
the political views of their owners - Editors engaged in sensationalism and yellow
journalism - Maximized readership
- Tabloids
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20Broadcast Media
- National radio 1920s
- Television late 1940s
- Pay TV, cable TV, subscription TV, satellite TV,
the internet - Narrowcasting
- vs. broadcasting
- targeted to one small sector of the population
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22Primacy of Television
- News-type programming has increased
- Images more important than words
- Stories can be constructed for maximum drama
- Reliance on sound bite
- Brief, memorable comment that can easily be fit
into news broadcasts - Focus on horse race aspect of campaigns
- Political advertising
- Presidential debates
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24Talk-Show Politics Internet Broadcasting
- Talk radio
- 300 in 1989 ? over 1200 in 2005
- Criticized for focusing on personal attacks vs.
policy issues - ? increases intolerance and irrationality in
politics - Internet
- Increased narrowcasting
- Used more by younger people
25From Broadcasting to Narrowcasting Rise of Cable
and Cable News
7.2
- A general audience no more
- Breaking news
- Talk radio on television
- Outrage discourse
- Selective exposure
267.2
How the audiences of cable news channels have
polarized into rival partisan camps
277.2
Watching only news programs that reflect the
viewers politics is called
- Selective exposure
- Narrowcasting
- Infotainment
- High-tech politics
287.2
Watching only news programs that reflect the
viewers politics is called
- Selective exposure
- Narrowcasting
- Infotainment
- High-tech politics
29FRQ Practice
30Government Regulation of Media
- U.S. has one of the freest presses in the world
- Regulation of the media does exist
- First Amendment does not mention electronic media
- Government has more control over it
- Equal-time rule - stations must provide
equivalent opportunity to opposing political
candidates who request it (with some exceptions) - Federal Communications Commission (FCC)
- Issues licenses for radio TV stations
- Cant operate without one
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32Controlling Ownership of Media
- Telecommunications Act of 1996
- Ended rule that kept telephone companies out of
the cable business - One corporation can offer telephone service,
cable TV, satellite TV, Internet, and libraries
of films and entertainment - Media conglomerates
- AOL/Time-Warner
- Rupert Murdoch
- Fox Television, Wall St. Journal, etc.
- Who owns what?
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35Government Control of Content
- First Amendment protections extended to media
- Government can restrict indecent programming
- 2004 FCC levied fines exceeding those imposed in
the previous nine years combined - Howard Stern
- Janet Jacksons wardrobe malfunction
- Government control of media during Iraq War
- Embedded journalists
- Ban on coverage of flag-draped coffins
36Media Bias
- Study in 1980s found that the media elite
exhibited a liberal bias in news coverage - Journalists are more likely to identify as
liberal and vote Democrat - Contention has been repeated time and again
- However, difficult to prove