C1 Media (A02/AO3 & exam skills) Flashcards
The following flash cards will help improve your skills of analysis/evaluation & strengthen your memory through spaced retrieval practice and a technique called elaborative interrogation.
WHAT IS ELABORATIVE INTERROGATION?
Elaborative Interrogation involves the learner looking for explanations for facts. A sizable body of evidence suggests that prompting students to answer ‘WHY’ & ‘HOW’ questions facilitates learning.
To help you do this think as hard as possible about the E.I. questions at the bottom of each answer in the following flash cards. What we think hard about is what we remember
►‘Memory is the residue of thought’ (Dan Willingham)
What are some strengths and advantages of the Marxist view of the ownership & control of the media?
The Marxist view = The owners directly control media content. They manipulate that content and media audiences to protect their profits and spread the dominant ideology of the ruling class. (this view is adopted by writers like Miliband)
- Curran and Seaton (2010) found evidence that some media owners (e.g. Murdoch & the ‘Press Barons’) interfere in the content of their news media at the expense of the independence of media professionals (e.g. all of Murdoch’s 175 newspapers supported the Iraq War in 2003)
- According to a former Murdoch editor, Eric Beecher, the consistent ideology of Murdoch’s Newspapers is maintained, “by phone and by clone”. This supports the Marxist view that Media owners can (and do) control the content of the media
- This perspective is logical as media professionals have little choice other than to run the media within the boundaries set by the owners
E.I. - WHY does Murdoch exercise editorial control on major issues such as Europe and General Elections? WHY do media professionals (editors/journalists) have to run the media within the boundaries set by owners?
What are some weaknesses and criticisms of the Marxist view of the ownership & control of the media?
The Marxist view = The owners directly control media content. They manipulate that content and media audiences to protect their profits and spread the dminant ideology of the ruling class. (this view is adopted by writers like Miliband)
- Pluralists would argue that there is a wide range of opinion in the media and that the media have to provide what the audiences - not the owners - want
- The Government regulate media ownership so no one person or company has too much influence
- Audiences are not as passive and gulible as the Marxist view suggets
- The rise of new digital media and the growth of citizen journalism has undermined the traditional influence of media owners
E.I. - WHY might audiences have more control of the media than owners? WHY might audiences not be as passive as the Marxist view suggests? WHY might ‘new media’ be undermining the influence of media owners?
What are some strengths and advantages of the Neo-Marxist view of the ownership & control of the media?
Neo-Marxist view = This approach recognizes the power of owners, but, unlike the traditional Marxist approach, it suggests that owners rarely have direct operational control of the media. However, media professionals are inclined to side with media owners on most issues due to their own privileged backgrounds. (this view is adopted by the Glasgow Media Group)
- It recognizes that owners are often not involved in the day-to-day running of their media businesses
- It recognizes that media managers, editors and journalists have some professional independence, and are not simply manipulated by media owners
- Research conducted by the Sutton Trust (2016) supports the argument that media professionals are drawn from privileged background. Over half (54%) of the country’s leading news journalists were educated in private schools, which account for 7% of the school population as a whole
E.I. - WHY might it not always be possible for media owners to have operational control of their media organisations? WHY are the majority of leading journalists from wealthy backgrounds?
https://youtu.be/pSzh2KjSz6s?t=4m37s
http://www.suttontrust.com/wp-content/uploads/2006/06/Journalists-backgrounds-final-report.pdf
What are some weaknesses and criticisms of the Neo-Marxist view of the ownership & control of the media?
Neo-Marxist view = This approach recognizes the power of owners, but, unlike the traditional Marxist approach, it suggests that owners rarely have direct operational control of the media. However, media professionals are inclined to side with media owners on most issues due to their own privileged backgrounds. (this view is adopted by the Glasgow Media Group)
- This approach underrates the power and influence of the owners. E.g. former Sun editor David Yelland said that all Murdoch’s editors go on a journey where they end up agreeing with everything Murdoch says…“What would Rupert think about this?” is like a mantra in your head’
- Pluralists argue that the rise of new digital media and the internet puts more control into the hands of media users at the expense of media professionals
- Journalists do not simply trot out the dominant ideology, but can develop critical, anti-establishment views which strike a chord with their audiences
E.I. - WHY might ‘new media’ undermine the influence of media professionals? WHY might some journalists be prepared to question the dominant capitalist ideology?
What are some strengths and advantages of the Pluralist view of the ownership & control of the media?
The Pluralist view = They argue that media content is driven not by a dominant ideology or the political interests of owners, but by the fight for profits through high circulation and audience figures, Therefore the media have to be responsive to audience tastes and wishes. (this view is supported by writers like John Fiske)
- There is a wide range of newspapers, magazine, television channels and other media (including the internet) reflecting a huge range of interests and ideas, including those which challenge the dominant ideology
- More people, not just media owners and professionals, have the opportunity to communicate with vast numbers of other people thanks to Web 2.0
- Public Service Broadcasters, such as the BBC, ensure that the interests and tastes of all groups (including minorities) are catered for
E.I. - WHY does the growth of ‘citizen journalism’ support the Pluralist view? WHY might the BBC help to create media diversity?
What are some weaknesses and criticisms of the Pluralist view of the ownership & control of the media?
The Pluralist view = They argue that media content is driven not by a dominant ideology or the political interests of owners, but by the fight for profits through high circulation and audience figures, Therefore the media have to be responsive to audience tastes and wishes. (this view is supported by writers like John Fiske)
- Not all groups in society have equal influence on editors and journalists to get their views across. Even within the new media there are often powerful ‘gate-keepers’ who filter certain views
- Only very rich groups will have the resources required to launch major media companies to get their views across independently and the rich can also use legal action to stop stories that threaten their interests
- The pressure to attract audiences doesn’t increase media choice but limits it - the media decline in quality, and news and information get squeezed out or sensationalized, and turned into ‘infotainment’
- The media themselves may have created audience tastes so that what audiences want is really what the media owners want (‘false needs’)
E.I. - HOW does the concept of ‘gate-keeping’ relate to control of the internet? WHY might the pressure to attract audiences lead to a lack of diversity in the media? HOW might the media cultivate ‘false needs’?
What are some of the arguments and evidence that would support the view that the media act as an agency for social control?
Social control = The processes by which society ensures that people conform to its culture, and the mechanisms by which it deals with deviance
- For Marxists the most powerful agent of social control nowadays is the media. Milliband went as far as arguing that the media had become ‘the new opium of the masses’
- Marxists argue that the ruling class use the media to control what people think. This is known as ‘ideological power’, or ‘hegemony’ - & it is the ability to shape people’s minds in terms that favour the interests of the power holders
- E.g. Marxists argue that capitalist societies are highly unequal. However, they argue that because the rich and powerful control the media they use this to promote a ‘myth of meritocracy’. This leads to people accepting rather than challenging inequality
- Adorno is an example of a Marxist theorist. He called the media the ‘culture industry’ and argued that it produced a popular culture that kept people occupied, placid and docile. This stopped people thinking about important things such as their own exploitation by the ruling class and what is actually happening in the world. This is what Marxists call false consciousness. The media therefore controls people by discouraging critical thinking and misdirection.
- Radical feminists believe that the media plays a powerful role in controlling the lives of women in contemporary society. E.g. They deliberately dupe women into believing in the ‘beauty myth’ (Naomi Wolf), i.e. that they should conform to what is a male image of what it is to be a ‘proper’ woman in terms of good looks, weight size etc.
E.I. - WHY did Milliband call the media ‘the new opium of the masses’? HOW might the media promote a ‘myth of meritocracy’? WHY might popular culture keep the masses passive? WHY does the media promote a ‘beauty myth’ for women?
https://youtu.be/ZVrUElmiSrE?t=5m19s
What are some of the arguments and evidence against the view that the media act as an agency for social control?
Social control = The processes by which society ensures that people conform to its culture, and the mechanisms by which it deals with deviance
- Pluralists are critical of the Marxist view of social control as they think that it wrongly assumes that media audiences are passive & gullible. In contrast they argue that audiences are active and discriminating in their use and interpretation of the media
- For example, audiences filter what they read, see or hear in the media by selective exposure, selective perception and selective retention
- ‘New media’ offer the possibility of creating autonomous networks of communication which bypass the control by governments and corporations of the mass media. This means that the Marxist view of the media may not be as relevant when assessing the role of ‘new media’
- The internet in particular opens up lots of possibilities for groups to present counter-ideologies of their own which may challenge the hegemony of ruling groups. The potential for groups to use ‘new media’ (e.g. through ‘citizen journalism’) to challenge and resist the power of ruling groups has clearly been shown by a number of recent protests
- Pluralists claim that radical feminist critiques of the media underestimate women’s ability to see through gender stereotyping and manipulation.
E.I. - WHY do recent political protests support the view that the ‘new media’ can be used as a tool of resistance rather than a form of control? WHY is the idea of ‘false consciousness’ criticised by Pluralists?
Outline and explain how the media creates moral panics
Moral panic = A concept used by Stan Cohen that refers to the media’s ability to transform an event or social group into a threat to society (i.e. a ‘folk devil’) through sensationalist reporting of news
- The term moral panic was coined by Cohen to refer to media reactions to groups whose behaviour is regarded as threatening to societal values
- Moral panics are a classic example of ‘deviancy amplification’ where the media overreacts and sensationalises stories whilst demonising deviant groups. Through this process the media may encourage and increase the behaviour they are condemning (e.g. Thornton found that the moral panic about drug taking in the ‘rave scene’ simply added to its attraction to young people)
- The media transforms deviant groups into ‘folk devils’ whose behaviour is represented as being morally degenerate. These groups are usually those who lack power within society such as the young, the poor and minority ethnic groups
- The media use symbolic short hands to represent the groups identified as folk devils. This refers to the way in which the media use things like items of clothing, hairstyles, modes of transport etc. to stereotype and demonise certain groups as troublemakers (e.g. ‘hoodies’)
- The media will then generally adopt the role of a ‘moral crusader’ by exerting pressure on the government and police to clamp down on the group they have labelled as deviant
E.I. - HOW would Marxists interpret moral panics? WHY might moral panics be harder to sustain these days? WHY is it important for the media to use symbolic short hands when representing deviant groups?
Outline and explain the characteristics of the ‘new media’
New media = Media based on digital computers, such as the internet, digital TV and digital radio
- Digitalisation. The growth of digital technology in the 1990s resulted in changes in the way information is stored and transmitted. All information, regardless of format (e.g. images, text and sound) is now converted into binary code
- Technological convergence. Digitalisation resulted in the convergence of different types of information – text, photos, video, films and music – into a single delivery system, available to media devices such as smart TVs, laptops, tablets & smartphones. As Boyle notes, digitalisation allows information to be delivered across a range of media platforms that were once separate & unconnected technologies
- Economic convergence. This technological convergence has also led to economic convergence. Media and telecommunication industries that once previously produced separate and distinct systems of communication, such as the telephone, TV programmes or computers, begin to make economic alliances with each other because digitalisation has blurred the boundaries between media sectors
- Interactivity. The new media are interactive media that are responsive in ‘real time’ to user input. This is exemplified by Web 2.0 (see video link below)
- Choice. Jenkins argues that media audiences today can now interact with a variety of global media, often using a single device in their search for entertainment, information etc.
- Participatory culture. New media audiences are no longer passive receivers of media content. Instead they often actively collaborate with new media and other users by uploading user generated content (Gauntlett refers to new media audiences as ‘prosumers’). Citizen journalism also illustrates the participatory culture of new media
E.I. - WHY has digitalisation had a huge impact on the ownership and control of the media? WHY does Gauntlett use the term ‘promsumer’ to describe new media audiences? WHY might the new media be creating a ‘digital divide’ in society?
Outline and explain the processes by which the ‘news’ is socially constructed
Social construction of the news = The idea that ‘the news’ is a socially manufactured product because it is the end result of a selective process. Journalists cannot report every event which occurs - therefore what counts as news is shaped by a range of influences (e.g. owners, advertisers, media professionals, organisational constraints etc)
- The traditional Marxist perspective emphasises the role of media owners in the production of the news. They argue that media owners such as Rupert Murdoch manipulate the news output of their media
- Chomsky argues that news-gathering is heavily influenced by the power of advertisers. This means that what becomes ‘news’ is partly a result of commercial pressures to attract audiences by selecting and presenting the more colourful and interesting events in society (infotainment)
- The power of media professionals (journalists, editors etc.) to refuse to cover some issues and to let others through is called gate-keeping. Events that are eventually reported in the news have been through some kind of gate-keeping process, with journalists, and particularly news editors, deciding what is newsworthy and what is not
- Research by Galtung and Ruge has shown that journalists operate with values and assumptions about which events they regard as ‘newsworthy’. These assumptions are called news values, & they guide journalists in deciding what to report and what to leave out, and how what they choose to report should be presented (e.g. proximity, threshold, personalisation, titillation etc.)
- Journalists also operate within what Becker called a ‘hierarchy of credibility’. This means they treat more seriously the views of powerful and influential individuals and groups. Hall et al suggest such people are the ‘primary definers’ of ‘news’
- Newspapers and TV news programmes tend to work within quite tight time schedules. This means that short cuts to news gathering may need to be taken and has led to the practice that Nick Davies calls ‘churnalism’
E.I. - WHY are the news media full of stories that are interesting to the public (gossip, trivia, scandal etc.) rather than in the public interest? WHY may ‘churnalism’ increase the influence of the primary definers on the production of the news? HOW is ‘citizen journalism’ influencing the production of the news?
https://youtu.be/treVf6NXJYA?t=38s
What are some of the arguments and evidence that support the view that the media present stereotypical images of women
Stereotypes = Generalised, oversimplified views of the features of a social group, allowing for few individual differences between members of the group. Media stereotypes act like codes that give audiences quick & easy-to-understand images of groups.
- The way women are often under-represented or represented in a limited no. of stereotypical roles was described by Tuchman (1978) as the ‘symbolic annihilation of women’
- A stereotypical image of women that has featured heavily in media representations is the content, capable and caring house-wife and mother. Ferguson uses the term ‘cult of femininity’ to refer to the way in which women’s magazines promote a traditional ideal where excellence is achieved through caring for others, the family, marriage and appearance
- Wolf (1990), in her book ‘The Beauty Myth’, suggests that the stereotypes of women used by the media present a particular ‘beauty ideal’ through which they transmit the strong ideological message that women should treat their bodies as a project in constant need of improvement
- This media beauty stereotype, especially when it is found in pornography, national newspapers and lads’ magazines, essentially views women as sex objects to be consumed by what Mulvey (1975) calls the ‘male gaze’, whereby the camera lens essentially ‘eyes up’ the female characters, providing erotic pleasure for men
- Bates (2014) argues that the music industry is particularly guilty of sexually objectifying women in lyrics and video. Andrea Levy uses the term ‘raunch culture’ to describe the increasingly sexualised culture that objectifies women
- The above points suggest that women are stereotyped by the media either as domestic servants providing comfort & support for men, or as sex objects to service men’s sexual needs. In both cases, women play subordinate & subservient roles. Radical Feminists see this as an example of patriarchal ideology – a set of beliefs which distorts reality and supports male dominance
E.I. - WHY are media stereotypes particularly easy to spot in advertising? HOW would the ‘Beauty Myth’ be interpreted by Marxists and Marxist Feminists? HOW do animated Disney Films provide eveidence of gender stereotypes?
https://youtu.be/F0BhUXt7_rY?t=1m21s
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lNlKjUfmaUA
What are some of the arguments and evidence against the view that the media present stereotypical images of women
Stereotypes = Generalised, oversimplified views of the features of a social group, allowing for few individual differences between members of the group. Media stereotypes act like codes that give audiences quick & easy-to-understand images of groups.
- Liberal Feminists argue that although women are still stereotyped by the media, this is happening to a lesser degree than in the past as the number of female journalists, editors and broadcasters increases
- There is some evidence that the representation of gender roles has become more equal and less stereotyped. Drawing upon two content analysis studies of gender representations on prime-time TV shows, Gauntlett’s research (2002) indicates a massive decrease since the 1970s in the proportion of women whose main occupation was represented as housewife – now only 3%
- These cultural changes started to seep into British television culture through American series such as Sex in the City, Ally McNeal, Buffy the Vampire Slayer and The X-Files. Westwood notes how many of these series subverted hegemonic definitions of gender by having female lead characters who were just as confident and powerful as the male character
- There has been a fundamental change in women’s attitudes – Wilkinson (1994) calls this a ‘genderquake’ – which means that their aspirations have dramatically changed with education and career replacing marriage and family as priorities. This is increasingly reflected in media aimed at women
- For example, magazines aimed at women (e.g. Cosmopolitan) challenge traditional stereotypes of femininity with women no longer portrayed as the weaker sex. Instead, young women are encouraged ‘to be assertive, confident, and supportive of each other’ (McRobbie, 1999)
E.I. - WHY should we be cautious when generalising about media representations of women? WHY have some feminists argued that media representations of female action heros constitute a ‘post-feminist masquerade’?
Outline and explain the ways in which the media are an important agency of socialisation
Agency of socialisation = Any social group or institution that passes on cultural norms and values to others e.g. The Family, Media, School etc.
Media as an agency of socialisation = The idea that the media helps to transmit the culture of society by teaching people norms, values etc.
- The media help to construct gender identities & thus socialise individuals into their gender role. Judith Butler points out that media stereotyping of gender roles is so powerful it is difficult to avoid gender socialisation & gendered behaviour
- According to Cohen ‘moral panics’ created by the media help to clarify the moral boundaries of the society in which they occur and reinforce the norms & values of mainstream culture
- The media help to create a national culture and national identity, particularly through the reporting of things like international sport (Olympics and World Cup for example)
- Media saturation has increased the influence of the media as an agency of socialisation.
E.I. - HOW does the media socialise children into gender roles? WHY might ‘moral panics’ help to clarify moral boundaries? WHY has ‘media saturation’ increased the influence of the media?
What are some of the arguments and evidence that support the view that the portrayal of ethnic minority groups in the media is negative and stereotypical?
Stereotypes = Generalised, oversimplified views of the features of a social group, allowing for few individual differences between members of the group. Media stereotypes act like codes that give audiences quick & easy-to-understand images of groups
- Black crime is the most frequent issue found in media news coverage of ethnic minorities. Van Dijk found that Black people, particularly African-Caribbeans, tend to be portrayed as criminals, especially in the tabloid press and more recently as members of organised gangs that push drugs & violently defend urban territories
- Watson (2008) notes that moral panics often result from media stereotyping of Black people as potentially criminal. This effect was first brought to sociological attention by Hall’s classic study of a 1970s moral panic that was constructed around the folk devil of the ‘Black mugger’.
- Poole (2000), argues that Islam has always been demonised and distorted by the Western media. Muslims have been stereotyped as backward, extremist, fundamentalist and misogynist. Poole’s work can be linked to the concept of ‘the other’.
- It can be argued that British news reporting is ethnocentric, i.e. shaped by the view that British White culture is superior in its values and norms compared with other cultures. As a result, the activities of other cultures are likely to be generally reported as deficient, inferior and strange.
- Immigrants are often represented as a ‘threat’ in terms of their ‘numbers’ - and because of the impact they supposedly have on the supply of jobs, housing etc.
- The Information Centre about Asylums and Refugees notes that studies of media coverage of asylum seekers have constructed an image of migrants as a problem or threat to British identity & cohesion.
E.I. - WHY is the idea of ‘othering’ a useful concept when analysing media representations of ethnic minorities? WHY are media reports on immigration often false or distorted? WHY are minority ethnic groups often used as folk devils?
What are some of the arguments and evidence against the view that the the portrayal of ethnic minority groups in the media is negative and stereotypical?
Stereotypes = Generalised, oversimplified views of the features of a social group, allowing for few individual differences between members of the group. Media stereotypes act like codes that give audiences quick & easy-to-understand images of groups
- Gauntlett (2008) points out that sociological analysis of media representations needs to be cautious, because of the sheer diversity of media in Britain. Although certain newspapers like The Daily Mail and Express perpetuate negative stereotypes other sections of the media are more positive.
- For example Black & Asian presenters are much more common, with some in positions of considerable authority. In 2005, a BBC News Online survey noted that Black and Asian people were represented as newscasters and television journalists (However, it should also be noted that there are few people from ethnic minorities in senior management positions within the mainstream media)
- Media have been firm in their exposure of racism. For example, there has been high profile coverage of football racism
- Although many sociologists have argued that the media are not concerned with black victims of crime the extensive media coverage of the murder of the black teenager Stephen Lawrence shows the media in a more positive light
- Some parts of the media that cater for ethnic minorities are on the increase. For example there is a range of homegrown media agencies that are owned, managed and controlled by ethnic minorities Their representations of race are very different from those found in the wider media
E.I. - WHY might it be argued that the extensive Daily Mail coverage of the murder of Stephen Lawrence is an example of ‘tokenism’? WHY might the rise in homegrown media agencies lead to a process of ‘ghettoization’?
Outline and explain the main changes to patterns of media ownership
- Probably the most important trend in the pattern of media ownership has been the increasing concentration of media ownership. Bagdikian (2004) points out that, in 1983, 50 corporations controlled the vast majority of all news media in the USA. However, by 2014, media ownership in the USA was concentrated in six corporations
- Curran suggests that there has been a similar concentration of ownership in the British newspaper industry. Seven individuals dominate the ownership and content of UK national daily and Sunday newspapers
- We are also seeing concentration in terms of ownership of internet companies, as the traditional media companies compete with cybermedia organisations to control social networking sites, which are extremely lucrative in terms of advertising revenue
- Concentration of ownership is consolidated by cross media ownership or horizontal integration. This refers to the fact that the bigger media companies often own a range of different types of media outlets
- Concentration of ownership is also strengthened by vertical integration. This refers to the increasing trend of global media conglomerates to control all levels of media production (e.g. Time Warner makes its own films and distributes them to its own cinema complexes)
- Concentration of media ownership has been assisted by globalisation. A small no. of companies have transformed themselves into global media conglomerates. E.g. News Corporation owns hundreds of different types of media companies across Asia, Europe & North America
- There are, however, some factors that suggest the steady march towards media concentration may not be inevitable. E.g. the failure of very large corporations to work effectively for their shareholders has led to the decision to de-merge certain media companies (e.g. the Internet provider AOL and Time Warner have now gone their separate ways). Also following the phone hacking scandal News Corporation has been split into two different companies
E.I. - WHY are many people very concerned about media concentration? HOW can the points above be linked to the concepts of ‘synergy’ & technological convergence?
Outline and explain media representations of the working class
Working class = Usually seen as the lowest class in capitalist societies & traditionally seen as being made up of those who earn wages through manual labour
- The working class are generally under-represented in the media, but when they are represented they are typically stereotyped in negative ways
- According to Lisa Mckenzie unfair, patronizing and mean representations of poor, working class people, and the places where they live, are everywhere in the UK’s media. They are often viewed as ‘disgusting subjects’; usually through targeting disparaging descriptions of their bodies and clothing. The cultural practices of the working class are not only described as ‘tasteless’, but are also encoded as immoral, wrong and criminal
- Owen Jones highlights the growth of a new TV genre that he calls ‘poverty porn’ (media which exploits the poor’s condition in order to gain audiences). The recent C4 series Benefits Street is an example
- Newman argues that when working-class people are featured in fictional representations, the media depiction is often either unflattering or pitying. They have typically been portrayed as well intentioned but dumb buffoons or as immature exhibitionists
- Older representations of the working class are more sympathetic. The ‘kitchen sink’ British cinema of the 1960s, represented by films such as Saturday Night, Sunday Morning and Kes, television drama such as Our Friends in the North and films such as The Full Monty and Brassed Off have portrayed working class life and problems in a dignified, sensitive and supportive way
E.I. - WHY have we seen the growth in ‘poverty porn’ in recent years? WHY do the media often portray the failings of the working class as arising from their lack of conformity to middle-class values, norms and life-styles?
How much time do I have for the C1 exam paper in total?
You have two and a half hours in total for the C1 exam. There are three sections (a,b & c) in this exam and Media is section c
Watch this screencast for more information:
What are some of the arguments and evidence that support the hypodermic syringe model of audience effects?
Hypodermic Syringe Model = A theory which argues that the effect of the media on audiences is powerful, uniform, direct and immediate. This perspective therefore views audiences as passive and easily manipulated
- Bandura et al. (1963) carried out an experiment on young children which involved exposing them to films and cartoons of a self-righting doll being attacked with a mallet. They concluded on the basis of this experiment that violent media content could lead to imitation or copycat violence.
- Advertisers spend millions of pounds on advertising their products, and we might reasonably assume that these have some effect on consumers and the sale of goods advertised. In 1957, Vance Packard wrote a famous book about advertising called The Hidden Persuaders. He described how ordinary people were persuaded to consume goods without being aware of the techniques being used. Advertisers increasingly hire psychologists to develop subliminal messages (below threshold of consciousness) in order to persuade consumers to buy products.
E.I. - HOW does subliminal advertising work? WHY are the experiments carried out by Bandura criticised?