Monday, 24 October 2011

London Riots Recreation- Art

Locked in time: London riots scenes recreated in tiny clocks featuring looters, riot police and street-sweepers

By Stephen Hull
I found the concept of using the london riot scenes in this way as interesting and a the same time contentious.

The link and some of the pictures are as follows: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2038824/London-riots-2011-Scenes-recreated-tiny-clocks-featuring-looters-police.html

Adgenda Setting and Constructing Reality

Adgenda Setting

Agenda Setting is a theory, but like all good, solid theories is all a bit obvious really
Redman, 2011

The media play a large role in ‘constructing’ or ‘mediating’ the social world as we understand it.An individual’s conception of reality is socially constructed through a process of communication using shared language. Reality exists, but the way we come to know it, talk about it, understand it, is mediated through social life.

The four agendas in media
1) PUBLIC AGENDA -the set of topis that members of the public perceive as important.
2) POLICY AGENDA -issues that decision makers think are salient. (i.e. legislators)
3) CORPORATE AGENDA -issues that big business & corporations consider important.
4) MEDIA AGENDA -issues discussed in the media.

“Agenda setting is the process of the mass media presenting certain issues frequently and prominentlywith the result that large segments of the public come to perceive those issues as more important than others. Simply put, the more coverage an issue receives, the more important it is to people.”
(Coleman, McCombs, Shaw, Weaver, 2008)


“Propaganda is used as a tool to help shape images in the minds of human beings in support of an enterprise, idea or group. Propaganda can be used to substitute one social pattern for another.”

http://blog.15minutephilosophers.com/2010/11/19/walter-lippmann.asp

Two Levels of Agenda Setting
First Level Agenda Setting Theory: This is for the most part studied by researchers and emphasizes the major issues and "the transfer of the salience of those issues." At this level the media suggest whatthe public should focus on through coverage.
Second Level Agenda Setting Theory: This is essentially, how the media focuses on the attributes of the issues. The media suggests howpeople should think about an issue.

Components of Agenda Setting
1. Media Gatekeeping
2. Media Advocacy
3. Agenda Cutting
4. Agenda Surfing
5. The diffusion of News
6. Portrayal of an Issue
7. Media Dependence
Agenda Surfing - The media "surfs" on the wave of topics originally mentioned in the opinion-leading media.
The Bandwagon Effect -public opinion influences others towards that opinion

The most common media dependency is Facebook/Twitter. It has become a way of life as people are constantly feeling the need to check Facebook or Twitter every couple of minutes.

Strengths
•explanatory power because it explains why most people prioritize the same issues as important.
•predictive power because it predicts that if people are exposed to the same media, they will feel the same issues are important.
•can be proven false. If people aren’t exposed to the same media, they won’t feel the same issues are important.
• meta-theoretical assumptions are balanced on the scientific side.
• It lays groundwork for further research.
• It has organizing power because it helps organize existing knowledge of media effects.

Weakness'
Media users may not be as ideal as the theory assumes. People may not be well-informed, deeply engaged in public affairs, thoughtful and skeptical. Instead, they pay casual and intermittent attention to public affairs, often ignorant of the details.
•For people who have made up their minds, the effect is weakened.
•News cannot create and conceal problems. The effect can merely alter the awareness, priorities and salience people attach to a set of problems.

Public Media

Public Media Notes

Public media:
  • not so much taxpayer support media but media that serves the general public
  • media whose mission is to serve or engage a public. 
  • publicly-funded broadcasters and networks
  • distribution mechanisms- Internet, podcasting, blogging. 

Public Media Players
SBS
SBS radio
TripleJ
ABC: Local Radio
ABC: Radio National
ABC: Classic FM
ABC 2
ABC
ABC 3
ABC 24 news
SBS 2

International Public Media
BBC -  UK funded by a license fee
PBS - US
NHK- Japan
4 - UK Public media
NPR - US
ARTE- France
DR - Danish
TVNZ -New Zealand
HK - Hong Kong
CBC- Canada

Public Media
  • Lots of journalists start careers in local media
  • For example: 4zzz - Four Triple Z - Triple Z
  • Public medias role in terms of democracy is to support the public in democratic decisions.
  • Public media needs to have public value.

In 1985 the Broadcasting Research Unit defined public service broadcasting as involving:-Geographical universality. Broadcast programmesshould be available to the whole population.
-Universality of appeal. Broadcast programmesshould cater for all tastes and interests.
-There should be special provision for minorities,especially disadvantaged minorities.
-Broadcasters should recognisetheir special relationship to the sense of national identity and community.
-Broadcasting should be distanced from all vested interests, and in particular from those of the government of the day.
-Universality of payment. One main instrument of broadcasting should be directly funded by the corpus of users.
-Broadcasting should be structured so as to encourage competition in good programming rather than competition for numbers.
-The public guidelines for broadcasting should liberate rather than restrictbroadcasters
.

ABC programs
- Rake
- Australian Story
- Hungry Beast
- Angry Boys
- Catalyst
- Compass
- ABC news
- Radio Australia
- Dig music
- The Chasers War on Everything
- The Gruen Transfer

SBS programs (Hybrid model of funding)
- Wilfred
- Fat Pizza
- World News
- Insight
- The World Game
- Rock Wiz
- Living Black

Function of public media include ; nation building, national identity, national, conversations and national heritage.

Style and Aims of Public Media
  • Serious
  • 'broadsheet' style
  • importance over interest
  • considered, not quick and unchecked
To produce quality –while the budget might be tight PM need to produce programming that people want to watch (less commercial imperative)
To make themselves relevant (do they have a role to produce programs that mass audiences want to watch (ratings and audiences numbers?)
To engage with the democratic process (to provide programs that give voice and access to the political process, both mainstream and niche)
To Inform the public (hard and soft programming, accurate and balanced, reflective of the nation.)
To be independent (regulators and independence of funders government)

Challenges
The media is not owned by the government but is funded by it. This can cause tension between the government and the public media that acts as a watchdog.

The government exercise indirect control in two ways:
Legislation: stipulates what the ABC / SBS can and can’t do. Places guidelines on program content. Prevents advertising (though some on SBS).

Funding: Both, how much funding, and what the funding can be used for. Funding is increasingly not ‘block’ but for individual and specified programs like rural media or commissioning independent work.

There is always pressure to maintain independence.
Funding is always an issue.

Sunday, 11 September 2011

Commercial Media vs Public Media notes from week 7 and 8

Commercial Media

 
Media for advertisers to generate profits
audiences generate the profits

Austalian players
News Limited- branch of news corp : newspapers (local) , cable tv, film, magazines, books, NRL,
Nine Entertainment Co: (nine nsn, tickiteck, acer, magazines)
Win: (Win TV, Channel Ten and Nine, Radio Stations, ST George, TPG)
Fairfax Media: Newspapers and Digital Media (Brisbane Times, RSVP, My Career)
Southern Cross: Ten, Southern Cross TV, B105, Triple M
Seven West Media: West Australian, Pacific Magazines, Yahoo 7,
Ten Corp: Channel 10, 1HD, Eleven

  • Commercial media is either from subcription, sponsored or subsidised.
  •  
  • propagandaa- fox news, news limited
  •  
  • social fuction eg citizen journalism
  •  
  • important part of democracy
 the public sphere-
A space between commerce and government where people can debate freely (and form public opinion).
Social responsibility of The Media in a Democracy:

1.a truthful, comprehensive, and intelligent
account of the day’s events in a context which
gives them meaning;

2.a forum for the exchange of comment and criticism;
3.the projection of a representative picture of the
constituent groups in the society;

4.the presentation and clarification of the goals
and values of the society;

5.full access to the day’s intelligence.
(Hutchins Commission 1947)

Challenges for commercial media
Advertising revenue for broadcast media is down and continues to slide which causes a loss of revenue:
Less investment =
Less money for quality production =
More bought-in content (Less original) =More repeats of US sitcoms, more reality TV.

Monday, 29 August 2011

Web News

Old Media : Newspapers, Magazines, Television, Radio (Mass Communication)
Web 1.0 (Information Web): Focused on companies
Web 2.0 (New Media): The Social Web, focused on social groups
Web 3.0 (Semantic Web): Making sense of information, focused on individuals

See Powerpoint

Web 3.0 –“SEMANTIC WEB” may cause

-Hyperlocalisation?
-Specific Content Delivery
-PLUS –“News my way”
-PLUS –Advertising specifics
-MINUS –Ignorance and lack of “General knowledge”

Tuesday, 23 August 2011

JOUR1111: Introduction to Journalism and Communication



Personal Media Use and Production Diary

Sarah Anne Clarry