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Key
Terms:
I. The Mass Media Today
B. The mass media are a key part of that technology. Television, radio, newspapers, magazines, on-line services, and other means of popular communication are called the mass media or "the press," because they reach out and profoundly influence not only the elites but the masses. Nonetheless, entertainment programming represents the economic heart of the television industry. C.
Modern political success depends upon control of the mass media.
2. Image making does not stop with the political campaign. It is also a critical element in day-to-day governing, since politicians' images in the press are seen as good indicators of their clout. For example, the Reagan administration was particularly effective in controlling the president's image as presented by the media. A large part of today's so-called 30 second presidency (a reference to 30-second sound bites on TV) is simply a slick produced TV commercial. A sound bite is a short video clip of approximately 15 to 30 seconds, which are typically all that is shown from a politician's speech or activities on the nightly television news. 3. Critics fear that the media can determine the American political agenda by aiding one candidate while ruining another. A primary reason for this fear is that editors and reporters decide what is news and what is not, thereby impacting public opinion. 4.The
increased use of the media has directly contributed to the increasing costs
of election campaigns.
E. Moreover, primaries in the presidential nominating process have become significantly more important, largely because candidates depend so heavily on the mass media to get the early message out.
B. The daily newspaper is largely a product of the late nineteenth century, while radio and television have been around only since the first half of the twentieth. C. As recently as the presidency of Herbert Hoover (1929-1933), reporters submitted their questions to the president in writing, and he responded in writing (if at all). D.
Franklin D. Roosevelt (1933-1945) was the first president to use the media
effectively. To Roosevelt, the media were a potential ally., and he promised
reporters two press conferences (presidential
meetings with reporters) a week.
2.
FDR was the first president to use radio; he broadcast a series of "fireside
chats" to reassure the nation during the Great Depression.
2. Investigative journalism — the use of detective-like reporting methods to unearth scandals — pits reporters against political leaders. There is evidence that TV's fondness for investigative journalism has contributed to greater public cynicism and negativism about politics. 3.
The First Amendment gives legal protections to the American media that
are unavailable in most other countries. Even in democratic nations like
Great Britain, there is more censorship through government regulation of
media content.
G.
The print media
b. By the 1840s, the telegraph permitted a primitive "wire service," which relayed news stories from city to city faster than ever before. The Associated Press, founded in 1849, depended heavily on this new technology. c. Two newspaper magnates, Joseph Pulitzer and William Randolph Hearst, enlivened journalism around the turn of the century. This was the era of yellow journalism, where the main topics were sensationalized accounts of violence, corruption, wars, and gossip. The termyellow journalism is used to describe sensational news reporting. d. Newspapers consolidated into chains during the early part of the twentieth century. Today's massive media conglomerates control newspapers with 78 percent of the nation's daily circulation; these chains often control television and radio stations as well. e.
Among the most influential newspapers today are The New York Times
(a cut above most newspapers in its influence and impact almost from the
beginning), The Washington Post (perhaps the best coverage inside
Washington), and papers from a few major cities (The Chicago Tribune,
The Los Angeles Times, and others). For most newspapers in medium-sized
and small towns, the main source of national and world news is the Associated
Press wire service.
b. Serious magazines of political news and opinion (such as the New Republic, the National Review, and Commentary) are primarily read by the educated elite. c.
While you have already been advised that the United States Supreme Court,
in the absence of compelling government interest has banned the concept
of "prior restraint," the courts did issue an order restraining Progressive
Magazine from publishing an article on how the hydrogen bomb works.
b.
As a form of technology, television is almost as old as radio; the first
television station appeared in 1931.
b. President Kennedy was the first to hold a live, televised presidential news conference. b.
Television took the nation to the war in Vietnam during the 1960s, and
TV exposed governmental misinformation (some said it was outright lying)
about the progress of the war. President Johnson soon had two wars on his
hands, one in Vietnam and the other at home with antiwar protesters — both
covered in detail by the media.
4. Since 1963, surveys have consistently shown that more people rely on TV for the news than any other medium; and by a regular two-to-one margin, people think television reports are more believable than newspaper stories. 5. CBS, NBC, ABC and the FOX Network all represent the four leading television positions in the industry. 6.The Telecommunications Act of 1996 required manufacturers to include a "v-chip" in most new television sets. The chip was designed to allow parents to block programs that they do not want their children to view.
2.
Some important characteristics of the TV news business result from the
nature of the viewing audience.
b.
To a large extent, TV networks define news as what is entertaining to the
average viewer.
b. Those who make the news depend on the media to spread certain information and ideas to the general public (sometimes via stories fed to reporters in the form of trial balloons — information leaked to see what the political reaction will be). c. In turn, reporters rely on public officials to keep them informed. Official sources who have the information (such as knowledge about movements during the Persian Gulf War) usually have the upper hand over those who merely report it. d.
Very little of the news is generated by spontaneous events or a reporter's
own analysis. Most stories are drawn from situations over which news makers
have substantial control.
b.
Columnists like Jack Anderson regularly expose government corruption and
inefficiency.
2. TV news is little more than a headline service. With exceptions like the MacNeil-Lehrer News Hour (PBS) and Nightline (ABC), analysis of news events rarely lasts more than a minute. At the same time, complex issues — like nuclear power, the nation's money supply, and pollution — are difficult to treat in a short news clip. 3.
Paradoxically, as technology has enabled the media to pass along information
with greater speed, news coverage has become less complete. Americans now
hear sound bites of fifteen seconds or less on TV.
b. However, there is little reason to believe that journalists' personal attitudes sway their reporting of the news. Most stories are presented in a "point/counterpoint" format in which two opposing points of view are presented. c.
Nonetheless, surveys and polls show that an individual with liberal views
will have those view reinforced with continued exposure to political news
in the media.
b. Those who are best at objective reporting are usually rewarded by their editors. c.
Media outlets have a direct financial stake in attracting viewers and subscribers.
b. Journalists must select which stories to cover and to what degree. Due to economic pressures, the media are biased in favor of stories with high drama that will attract people's interest (rather than extended analyses of complex issues). c. Television is particularly biased toward stories that generate good pictures; seeing a talking head (a photographic shot of a person's face talking directly to the camera) is boring, and viewers will switch channels in search of more interesting visual stimulation.
B.
There is evidence that the news and its presentation are important in shaping
public opinion about political issues.
2.
By focusing public attention on specific problems, the media influence
the criteria by which the public evaluates political leaders.
2.
Political activists (often called policy
entrepreneurs — people who invest their political "capital" in an issue)
depend heavily upon the media to get their ideas placed high on the governmental
agenda.
b.
People in power can also use a leak, a carefully placed bit of inside information
that is given to a friendly reporter.
2. It is not only the elites who have successfully used the media. Civil Rights groups in the 1960s relied heavily on the media to tell their stories of unjust treatment. Many believe that the introduction of television helped to accelerate the movement by graphically showing Americans (in both North and South) what the situation was. 3. Conveying a long-term, positive image via the media is more important than a few dramatic events. Policy entrepreneurs depend on goodwill and good images. Public relations firms may be hired to improve a group's (or individual's) image and their ability to sell their policy positions.
2.
The media have a profound impact on the political policy agenda.
b.
The watchdog orientation of the press can be characterized as neither liberal
nor conservative, but reformist.
b.
The media portray government as responsible for handling almost every major
problem.
b.
Congress is difficult to cover on television because there are 535 members,
but there is only one president, so the presidency has increasingly received
more exposure vis-a-vis the Congress, as an institution. Members of the
judicial branch, as a general rule, tend to shun the media.
b.
With the media's superficial treatment of important policy issues, it is
not surprising that the incredible amount of information available to Americans
today has not visibly increased their political awareness or participation.
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