Institutional Analysis

  • Media concentration
  • Conglomerate – a company that owns numerous companies involved in mass media enterprises
  • Globalisation
  • Vertical Integration – when a media company own different businesses in the same chain of production and distrubution
  • Horizontal Integration – the process of a company increasing production of goods or services at the same part of the supply chain.
  • Gatekeepers – in a state of power, controlling access to something and therefore often used to regulate and narrow diversity
  • Regulation
  • Deregulation
  • Free market vs Monopolies & Mergers
  • Neo-liberalism and the Alt-Right
  • Surveillance / Privacy / Security / GDPR

David Hesmondhalgh

He critically analyse the relationship between media work and the media industry – ‘ there must be serious concerns about the extent to which this business-driven, economic agenda is compatible with the quality of working life and of human well-being in the creative industries.

Rupert Murdoch

Would Rupert Murdoch break up his empire? - BBC News

INSTITUTIONAL ANALYSIS

Definitions

  • Media concentration / Conglomerates = this is a company which owns numerous companies involved in the distribution of mass media enterprises. An example of a conglomerate is the BBC and FOX.
  • Globalisation (in terms of media ownership) = this is the world wide integration of media through the cross-cultural exchange of ideas.
  • Vertical Integration & Horizontal Integration =Horizontal integration is the process that a company or an institution uses to increase the production of goods. However, vertical integration is when a company integrates multiple stages of a production line to a small number of production units. Horizontal integration contrasts with vertical integration
  • Gatekeepers = A gatekeeper is a role given to a person who filter certain information for distributing out on public service broadcasts. A gatekeeper exerts power.
  • Regulation / Deregulation = A regulation is a law, procedure or a rule that is put in place by an authority and deregulation is the opposite – it is when you remove rules, procedures and laws from a certain industry.
  • Free market vs Monopolies & Mergers = The free market is an economic system which is based on supply and demand that has very little or no government control whereas a monopoly is when a company dominates a certain sector of an industry.
Characteristics of a Free Market - Gerard Lameiro, Ph.D.
  • Neo-liberalism = this is a form of liberalism that tends to favour free market capitalism.
  • Surveillance / Privacy / Security / GDPR = General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) is an EU law that states that there needs to be protection against data for all individuals and citizens withing the EU and European Economic Area.
What is General data Protection regulation?

David Hesmondhalgh

  • Wikipedia link = David Hesmondhalgh
  • He critically analysed the relationships between media and the media industry.
  • He wrote a book called “The Culture Industries”, which says that “the distinctive organisational form of the cultural industries has considerable implications for the conditions under which symbolic creativity is carried out“.
  • In an article he wrote with Banks (Banks, M., & Hesmondhalgh, D. (2009). Looking for work in creative industries policy. International Journal of Cultural Policy, 415-430, he said that “there must be serious concerns about the extent to which this business-driven, economic agenda is compatible with the quality of working life and of human well-being in the creative industries.
  • Hesmondhalgh notes, “one feature of cultural work in the complex professional era is that many more people seem to have wanted to work professionally in the cultural industries than have succeeded in do so. Few people make it, and surprisingly little attention has been paid in research to how people do so, and what stops others from getting on.
  • Angela McRobbie (2002) (2016 ) and others, (Communian, Faggian, & Jewell, 2011); (O’Brien, Laurison, Miles, & Friedman, 2016); (Hesmondhalgh, 2019) have argued, the study of creative work should include a wider set of questions including the way in which aspirations to and expectations of autonomy could lead to disappointment and disillusion.
  • Banks and Hesmondhalgh argued that “in its utopian presentation, creative work is now imagined only as a self-actualising pleasure, rather than a potentially arduous or problematic obligation undertaken through material necessity

The Cultural Industries: A book by Hesmondhalgh

  • His book The Cultural Industries (Sage) is an analysis of changes and continuities in television, film, music, publishing and other industries since the 1980s, and of the rise of new media and cultural industries during that time.
  • The fourth edition, published in December 2018, is a thoroughly revised, updated and expanded version of the third, published in 2012.
  • It’s now unrecognisable from the first edition of 2002, and has grown to over 600 pages. It’s been translated into various languages, including Chinese, Russian and Italian.

Rupert Murdoch: Media Empire

  • His media empire includes Fox News, Fox Sports, the Fox Network, The Wall Street Journal, and HarperCollins
  • Murdoch sold the majority of 21st Century Fox’s entertainment assets to the Walt Disney Company for $71.3 billion.
Murdoch's media empire | | Al Jazeera
BJ's nocabbages: Rupert Murdoch's Global Media Empire
BBC News - News International's contribution to the Murdoch empire
MEDIA: News corp revenues infographic
The Big Question: Is there no limit to the expansion of Rupert Murdoch's  media empire? | The Independent

Media and Society

  1. Media Ownership and Structure
  • A Large business or company, a combination of multiple businesses entitles operating in entirely different industries under one main group/business
  • Example = Murdoch. Murdoch’s large influence over politicians allowed him to create a monopoly over tabloids and news BSkyB, in a way that can be linked to manufacturing consent as under Thatcher monopolies were illegal, however due to Murdoch and how his support would benefit her, she allowed him to control lots of the print media in Britain.
  • Horizontal integration in Murdoch’s empire include Murdoch purchasing his son’s rapping company.
  • Manufacturing consent can be linked = Chomsky
  • Althusser can be linked to this

2. Media Regulation

  • The government allowing certain types of media to be published or not
  • The media is decided by the government on whether it can be published
  • Murdoch only able to own 39% of Sky, even though he had 100% control over print media, such as the Sun and the Sunday Times
  • A gatekeeper exerts power and the Prime Minister could be seen as a gate keeper, as they can say what media is allowed and what type of media isn’t.

3. Media Power and Control

  • Relate to Chomsky’s 5 filters in Manufacturing consent
  • An example of this can also be Bombshell (Film) and Murdoch’s empire including his main company News International.
  • Roger Ailes was at the top of Fox News, and was pro-trump, however, Murdoch was anti-trump.

4. The Media informing/coercing policy and decision making

  • Links to Habermas and the transformation of the public sphere
  • In the Murdoch Dynasty, it links to Brexit as Murdoch forced Tony Blair to get the UK to leave the EU

5. Media working practices (Promotion, success & financial reward and journalistic practices)

  • Links to Murdoch as his link to the Labour Party election in 1997, because Murdoch promoted Labour party to try and get people to vote for them.
  • David Hesmondhalgh can be linked to this.
  • Hesmondhalgh explores working practices

media INSTITUTIONS

KEY WORDS

  • Media concentration – Ownership is a process whereby progressively fewer individuals or organizations control increasing shares of the mass media.
  • Conglomerates – A conglomerate is a corporation that is made up of a number of different, sometimes unrelated businesses.
  • Globalisation – Globalization, or globalisation, is the process of interaction and integration among people, companies, and governments worldwide.
  • Vertical Integration – the combination in one firm of two or more stages of production normally operated by separate firms.
  • Horizontal Integration – Horizontal integration is the process of a company increasing production of goods or services at the same part of the supply chain.
  • Gatekeepers – Gatekeeping is the process through which information is filtered for dissemination, whether for publication, broadcasting, the Internet, or some other mode of communication
  • Regulation – Media regulations are rules enforced by the jurisdiction of law. Guidelines for media use differ across the world.
  • Deregulation – a process in which a government removes controls and rules about how newspapers, television channels, etc. are owned and controlled
  • Free market – The free market is an economic system based on supply and demand with little or no government control.
  • Monopolies – A market structure characterized by a single seller, selling a unique product in the market. In a monopoly market, the seller faces no competition
  • Merger – a merger or acquisition in which 2 or. more of the undertakings involved

Dave Hesmondhalgh

David Hesmondhalgh is among a range of academics who critically analyse the relationship between media work and the media industry. In his seminal book, The Culture Industries

A critical reflection that highlights the ‘myth-making’ process surrounding the potential digital future for young creatives, setting up a counter-weight against the desire of so many young people who are perhaps too easily seduced to pursue a career in the creative industries. (Hesmondhalgh)

Rupert Murdoch

Murdoch's media empire | | Al Jazeera
BBC News - News International's contribution to the Murdoch empire

Media regulation

An example is Rupert Murdoch trying to own all the news industries in the UK. However, according to UK law Rupert Murdoch was only able to own 39% of sky. This can be linked to Noam Chomsky and factoring consent in relation to getting Tony Blair elected for Prime Minister

institutional analyse

Media concentration / Conglomerates / Globalisation (in terms of media ownership)- A media conglomerate, media group, or media institution is a company that owns numerous companies involved in mass media enterprises, such as television, radio, publishing, motion pictures, theme parks, or the Internet. 

Vertical Integration-  The combination in one firm of two or more stages of production normally operated by separate firms. 

Horizontal Integration-  is the process of a company increasing production of goods or services at the same part of the supply chain 

Gatekeepers– Gatekeeping is the process through which information is filtered for dissemination, whether for publication, broadcasting, the Internet, or some other mode of communication. 

Regulation- Rules in media. The principal targets of media regulation are the press, radio and television, but may also include film 

Deregulation- Media deregulation refers to the process of removing or loosening government restrictions on the ownership of media outlets. 

Free market- The free market is an economic system based on supply and demand with little or no government control. 

Monopolies- A monopoly refers to when a company and its product offerings dominate a sector or industry. 

Mergers- a combination of two things, especially companies, into one.

David Hesmondhalgh– is among a range of academics who critically analyse the relationship between media work and the media industry. Wrote a book called The Cultural Industries which states ‘ the distinctive organisational form of the cultural industries has considerable implications for the conditions under which symbolic creativity is carried out’ In other words there must be serious concerns about the extent to which this business-driven, economic agenda is compatible with the quality of working life and of human well-being in the creative industries.

david hesmondalgh

  • critically analyses the relationship between media work and the media industry.

his book “The Culture industries” (2019) suggests:

the distinctive organisational form of the cultural industries has considerable implications for the conditions under which symbolic creativity is carried out’

he also states in a article:

there must be serious concerns about the extent to which this business-driven, economic agenda is compatible with the quality of working life and of human well-being in the creative industries.

the individualising discourses of ‘talent’ and ‘celebrity’ and the promise of future fame or consecration, have special purchase in creative work, and are often instrumental in ensuring compliance with the sometimes invidious demands of managers, organisations and the industry (Banks & Hesmondhalgh, p. 420).

creative work is now imagined only as a self-actualising pleasure, rather than a potentially arduous or problematic obligation undertaken through material necessity (2009, p. 417) 

the value of (family) connections in the industry, provide a sobering counterweight to the attributes of ‘determination and commitment’. As does the role of luck, chance and coincidence

David Hesmondhalgh

  • Critically analyse the relationship between media work and the media industry
  • Wrote a seminal book, The Culture Industries 
  • From The Cultural Industries: ‘the distinctive organisational form of the cultural industries has considerable implications for the conditions under which symbolic creativity is carried out’
  • there must be serious concerns about the extent to which this business-driven, economic agenda is compatible with the quality of working life and of human well-being in the creative industries (Banks, M., & Hesmondhalgh, D. (2009) International Journal of Cultural Policy, 415-430.)
  • Looked at ‘myth-making’ process surrounding the potential digital future for young creatives – the individualising discourses of ‘talent’ and ‘celebrity’ and the promise of future fame or consecration, have special purchase in creative work, and are often instrumental in ensuring compliance with the sometimes invidious demands of managers, organisations and the industry (Banks & Hesmondhalgh, p. 420).
  • Young people are brainwashed by the media to see it as a ‘utopian presentation, creative work is now imagined only as a self-actualising pleasure, rather than a potentially arduous or problematic obligation undertaken through material necessity (2009, p. 417)’. And do not understand that it is hard work and a difficult, competitive industry.
  • Mostly successful through family business.
  • Role of luck chance and coincidence.

Media Industries

  • Media Concentration – a process where less businesses control increasing shares of the mass media.
  • Conglomerates – a company that owns multiple companies involved in mass media enterprises.
  • Globalisation (in terms of media ownership) – when businesses grow large enough to operate on an international or global scale.
  • Vertical Integration – when one company owns multiple firms that can complete two or more stages of production.
  • Horizontal Integration – when a company increase production at the same stage of production.
  • Gatekeepers – someone who controls what is allowed; e.g. CEO.
  • Regulation – a rule that is maintained by an authority.
  • Deregulation – the reduction or elimination of government power in an industry, usually used to create more competition in an industry.
  • Free Market – when governments have little or no control so businesses can produce goods/services based on demand.
  • Monopolies – when one business controls the supply in an industry.
  • Mergers – when to businesses join to form one in order to achieve higher market control, better productivity and better economies of scale.

David Hesmondhalgh

David Hesmondhalgh is an academic who critically analyses the relationship between media work and the media industry. In his seminal book, The Culture Industries he wrote: “the distinctive organisational form of the cultural industries has considerable implications for the conditions under which symbolic creativity is carried out” – (The Culture Industries, Sage, 2019, p.99). In other words, there must be serious concerns about the extent to which this business-driven, economic agenda is compatible with the quality of working life and of human well-being in the creative industries.

He also goes on to say that young creatives are aiming to be in the media industry for the fame and wealth, he says that they will be disappointed when they start working there as it is not the myth that they got told it would be like when they were young. “its utopian presentation, creative work is now imagined only as a self-actualising pleasure, rather than a potentially arduous or problematic obligation undertaken through material necessity” (2009, p. 417) 

Murdoch Media Empiere

Murdoch's media empire | | Al Jazeera
The Big Question: Is there no limit to the expansion of Rupert Murdoch's  media empire? | The Independent
Would Rupert Murdoch break up his empire? - BBC News
Rupert Murdoch's global empire

Media Regulation

Murdoch went to the UK and wanted magazines, newspapers and television as with all of them you have control and power over the media. He wanted to buy Sky but the government stopped it and made him a shareholder of 39% of Sky. Murdoch later became friends with the prime minister so he could influence them to benefit himself as well as them. For example, Murdoch influenced Tony Blair to not go into the Euro and to keep the Pound; this led to Brexit.

This links to Chomsky and manufacturing consent as they are keeping the power between friends as he states that the media and politics need each other.

POST COLONIALISM essay

Media products often challenge the societal and cultural contexts in which they are created. 

To what Extent does an analysis of the Close Study Products Ghost Town and Letter to the Free support this view? [25 marks] 

Professor Natalie Fenton writes “I’ve always said you can’t understand the world without the media nor the media without the world”.  “Ghost Town” and “Letter to the Free” are both Music videos that protest the societal and cultural contexts in which they were created which shows that an analysis supports the view of Media products often challenging the societal and cultural contexts in which they are created. “Ghost Town” was created by the specials, a band in the genre of two-tone music, the name symbolising the presence of both black and white artists in the genre. The music video shows fear for a future Britain under rule of people like Thatcher who amplified racial tensions and neglected poor citizens during her time as prime minister. “Letter to the Free” by the rapper Common is a protest song against the racist institution of American Prisons, which, as described by the documentary the 13th, which this song is part of the soundtrack to, overwhelming criminalises black people and keeps them in prison to gain profit from their work as a form of slavery in the modern world, which is legal due to the exception in the 13th amendment that allows criminals to legally work as slave labourers. Since both music videos are about the injustices within the societies and cultures they were created in, analysing them based on societal and cultural theories and contexts should prove useful. The best way to understand these works is through the ideas of postcolonialism. 

Antonio Gramsci introduced the concept of Hegemonies – Systems of power that keep control on individuals in society. This concept can be seen as the culture that enforces laws to keep black people in prison due to the exception in the 13th Amendment because of the colonialist ideologies that have rooted themselves in western society. The music video for “Letter to the Free” by Common is an example of Hegemonic struggle through art where common is challenging and protesting these racist institutions. Hegemonic struggle is the idea that hegemony is a struggle through negotiation and consent, as a continual exchange of power. Edward Said created the term “Orientalism” to describe how colonisers characterised the people they colonised with a certain lens to define them as the “other”, supporting how colonisers historically subjugated and enslaved those they colonised. To justify the supposed superiority of white Europeans Colonial nations reinforced narratives of this worldview which eventually became a prominent normal view within society. Common’s Letter to the Free, therefore, can be seen as a form of struggle through culture to change the view within hegemonies towards a more anti-racism stance. While racist ideas were slowly introduced as normal facts in society through negotiation and consent, with this music video common demonstrates how ideas that oppose the colonial ideas in hegemonies can become more accepted in society through negotiation and consent by persuasion, inculcation and acceptance.  

Said draws on the idea from Jacques Lacan about the “Mirror stage” of development in Children. The first time they see themselves in a mirror is the first time they must confront the fact that this “Mirror image” represents themselves and is how everyone else sees them. This links to media because historically due to colonialist and orientalist ideas the orient has often been portrayed as the “other” to the west, as Said points out, leading to under-representation of minorities in Western media and thus dehumanisation and this is recognised by easterners from the skewed mirror image of their cultures and people in western media. Ghost Town and Letter to the Free are both music videos about racial tensions and protesting or a fear of racist institutions. As such, minorities are represented in these videos as ordinary people which again shows the hegemonic struggle by these artists to change the ideas in society. Here though it also done to combat the orientalist ideas of the eastern world in Western society. 

Louis Althusser expands on the concepts of Gramsci by introducing Internal state apparatus (ISA). ISAs are tools used to control people in society (etc. Religion, education, culture, family etc.). He also introduces the idea of interpellation, or the way someone is hailed/called, being the way ideologies are formed, as a way to recruit subjects among individuals and to alienate others. Frantz Fanon was a Black man born in the French colony of Martinique and lived in France. He experienced this interpellation by people in France calling him racist insults, which worked to construct him and by extension all black people, as “other” to specifically by the way he was hailed, perceived and understood, or interpellated. Frantz Fanon in “the wretched of the earth” goes on to describe how colonialised people can reclaim their identity and prevent most people from colonial cultures seeing them through the eyes of Empire. He claims that colonialised people need to begin eroding the colonialist ideology by; assimilating colonial culture to the benefit of the mother country, immersion into an authentic culture where old legends will be reinterpreted and the past of which will be uncovered, and fighting, revolutionary and national literature. The music video for Letter to the Free is an example of this fighting, revolutionary literature where Common protests the colonial idea of black inferiority by finding a voice and identity through the assimilation of colonial culture for the benefit of the mother country, for example, the use of English language and western instruments to raise awareness in a western and English-speaking nation. Common’s music video is also descriptive of Frantz Fanon’s quote: “from America, black voices will take up the hymn with fuller unison. The ‘black world’ will see the light” because Common is essentially attempting to achieve the erosion of colonial ideology that Frantz Fanon described and fought for as well. 

Paul Gilroy and W.E.B. du Bois before him proposed the idea of “Double consciousness”. This is the idea that colonised people, if living in a country that has historically profited from colonisation, must live with two cultural identities – those of the colonised people they are descended from, and those of the colonial country they live in, and is the identity of most people they live around. This can be seen in the music video for Ghost town by the Specials. The black artists of the two-tone music genre must practice a form of double consciousness to survive in a culture that has historically regarded the culture of their colonised country as lesser. Postcolonial thought also praises hybridity and cultural polyvalency, which is shown in this music video and the wider two-tone genre where both black and white musicians made bands together and presented a hybrid of historically black and white music genres. Therefore, not only are the artists of the two-tone genre having to live with a double-consciousness, but with this music video they are presenting positive representations of cultural polyvalency, where it is possible for the colonised and the colonial cultures to exist together in a postcolonial society. Fanon also raised the concept of identities that are hybrid, doubled or unstable, demonstrating how individual identity can be different but also reconciled with national identity. 

 In conclusion, Analysis of music videos and other media products through the idea that many challenge the contemporary views in society is very useful for understanding both the contexts of postcolonial societies and ideologies and for understanding the messages of the media as well. 

David Hesmondhalgh –

David Hesmondhalgh is among a range of academics who critically analyse the relationship between media work and the media industry. He wrote a book about this called ‘The Culture Industries’

the distinctive organisational form of the cultural industries has considerable implications for the conditions under which symbolic creativity is carried out’ The Culture Industries 

many more people seem to have wanted to work professionally in the cultural industries than have succeeded in do so. Few people make it, and surprisingly little attention has been paid in research to how people do so, and what stops others from getting on.’ 

creative work is now imagined only as a self-actualising pleasure, rather than a potentially arduous or problematic obligation undertaken through material necessity

He is taking about the theories of the self and identity in relation to aspirational ambitions and the realities of the creative economy. How it is romanticised vs the reality of the industry.