Media Organisation Flashcards
Basic trends…
Recent trends in media ownership and control suggest that the number of companies controlling global mass media has significantly shrunk in recent years.
Bagdikian (2004) notes that in 1983, 50 corporations controlled the vast majority of all news media in the USA, but by 2004 media ownership was concentrated in seven corporations. As seen in the graphs we previously examined.
Newspapers…
Curran (2003) notes that ownership of British newspapers has always been concentrated in the hands of a few powerful ‘press barons’, e.g. in 1937 four men owned nearly one in every two national and local daily newspapers sold in Britain.
Today, seven powerful individuals dominate the ownership of British national daily and Sunday newspapers.
TV…
TV - The content of commercial terrestrial television is mainly controlled by one company, ITV plc, whilst access to satellite, cable and digital television in Britain is generally controlled by two companies.
News Corp, (owned by Rupert Murdoch) which owns BSkyB, and Virgin Media (owned by Richard Branson).
Global conglomeration…
Horizontal Integration
Ownership and control of the mass media is a complex business as the following examples illustrate. Some media companies are characterised by horizontal integration or cross media ownership – this refers to the fact that global media corporations often cross media boundaries and invest in a wide range of media products.
NewsCorp, for example, owns newspapers, magazines, book publishers, terrestrial and satellite television channels and film studios in several countries.
Some media companies have focused on increasing economic control over all aspects of the production process in order to maximise profits. (Vertical integration)
e.g. film corporations not only make movies, but distribute them to their own cinema chains.
Diversification…
Some media corporations are not content to focus on media products, but have diversified into other fields. The best example of this is Virgin which began as a music label and record shop chain, but has expanded into a wide range of products and services including cola, vodka, banking, insurance, transport, digital television, cinema and wedding dresses.
Synergy…
Media companies often use their very diverse interests to package or synergise their products in several different ways, e.g. a film is often accompanied by a soundtrack album, computer game, ringtone or toy action figures. A company may use its global interests to market one of its own films through its television channels, magazines and newspapers in dozens of countries at the same time.
Technological convergence…
Technological convergence is a recent trend which involves putting several technologies into one media product.
Companies that normally work in quite separate media technology fields are joining up or converging in order to give customers access to a greater range of media services across technologies such as interactive television, laptops, MP3 players and mobile phones.
Doyle (2002)…
Doyle (2002) suggests that examination of ownership and control patterns is important for two reasons:
1) All points of view need to be heard if society is to be truly democratic.
2) Abuses of power and influence by elites need to be monitored by a free media.
Doyle argues that too much concentration of media ownership is dangerous and unhealthy because the media have the power to make or break political careers and have a considerable influence over public opinion.
Pluralists…
Pluralists argue that media owners are generally responsible in the way that they manage information because media content is mainly shaped by consumer demand in the marketplace.
They therefore only give the buying public what they want.
Editors, journalists and broadcasters have a strong sense of professional ethics which act as a system of checks and controls on potential owner abuse of the media.
Pluralists and democracy…
Pluralists suggest that the mass media are an essential part of the democratic process because the electorate today glean most of their knowledge of the political process from newspapers and television.
Pluralists argue that owners, editors and journalists are trustworthy managers and protectors of this process.
Who holds the power?…
Pluralists argue that media audiences are the real power holders because they can exercise the right to buy or not to buy.
If they did not like the choices that media owners are making available to them, or if they suspected that the media product was biased, such audiences would respond by not buying the product.
The media, therefore, supply what the audience wants rather than what the owner decides.
If some viewpoints have a greater range of media representing them, this is not necessarily biased. It merely reflects what the audience wants or views as important.
Pluralists - concentration of media ownership…
Pluralists also argue that concentration of ownership is a product of economic rationality rather than political or sinister motives.
It is driven by the need to keep costs low and to maximise profits.
Globalisation too results from the need to find new audiences rather than from cultural imperialism.
Pluralists argue that it is practically impossible for owners to interfere with the content of newspapers and television programmes because their businesses are economically far too complex for them to regularly interfere in the day-to-day running or the content.
Public service broadcasting (BBC)…
The BBC has a legal obligation to inform, to educate and to ensure that all programming is pluralistic and diverse, i.e. that all sections of society are catered for.
Pluralists argue that PSB is impartial and objective, and balances out any potential bias in the private sector.
Media owners are also restricted by state, or government, controls, e.g. in some societies, owners are not allowed to own too much media or different types of media.
Many countries also have cross ownership rules preventing people from owning more than one type of media. Furthermore, newspapers, television and radio in Britain are subject to legal controls and rules imposed on them by The Press Council and the Office for Communications (Ofcom).
Marxists…
Marxists believe that in order to legitimate and reproduce this system of inequality, the capitalist class uses its cultural power to dominate institutions like education and the mass media and transmit ruling class ideology.
The function of these agencies is to socialise the working class into accepting the legitimacy of the capitalist system and capitalist ideas.
Marxists - the media and ideology…
Marxists believe that media owners (who are members of the capitalist elite) use their media outlets to transmit ruling class ideology.
Miliband (1973) argued that the role of the media is to shape how we think about the world we live in and suggested that audiences are rarely informed about important issues such as inequalities in wealth or why poverty persists.
The capitalist system is rarely criticised or challenged. Instead, Marxists suggest that owners shape media content so that only ‘approved’ and conformist views are heard.
Tunstall and Palmer (1991) suggest that governments are no longer interested in controlling the activities of media owners because they need their support to either gain power or hang onto it.