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Agenda Setting: Agenda-setting is the creation of public awareness and concern of salient issues by the news media

Framing: Framing compromises a set of concepts and theoretical perspectives on how individuals, groups, and societies, organize, perceive, and communicate about reality

Myth Making:

agenda setting

Agenda setting is a theory which states the ‘ability to influence the importance placed on the topics of public agenda’. it creates public awareness and concern of major issues published by the media. Different media companies will frame the stories in particular ways to attempt to influence viewers, one of the main ideas in this theory is that media does not reflect reality, it filters and shapes it. For example the sun, a right wing newspaper, article on brexit showed it in a positive light whereas the mirror, a left wing newspaper, showed brexit in a more negative light. Another main idea of this theory is that the media concentrates on a few issues/subjects that lead the public to view the selected issues as more important than other issues. As media is biased, they may partake in ‘myth making’ to try and persuade the public what that specific media organisation wants others to believe 

5 filters of the mass media machine

AGENDA SETTING – Agenda-setting theory describes the “ability to influence the importance placed on the topics of the public agenda”. Agenda-setting theory was formally developed by Max McCombs and Donald Shaw in a study on the 1968 American presidential election.

FRAMING – Framing involves social construction of a social phenomenon – by mass media sources, political or social movements, political leaders, or other actors and organizations. … This is done through the media’s choice of certain words and images to cover a story (i.e. using the word fetus vs. the word baby).

Manufacturing consent

Structures of ownership

  • conglomerates own many businesses within the main company so they have lots of control over the population

The role of advertising

  • advertisers are paid for the audience

Links with ‘The Establishment’

Diversionary tactics – ‘flack’

Uniting against a ‘common enemy’

  • the media manipulates audiences into doing something by using the influence of a common enemy eg terrorists

AGENDA SETTING

  • Creation of public awareness and concern of big issues

FRAMING

  • Media companies frame a product in a certain way that consumers believe what they believe apposed to believing a different company

MYTH MAKING

  • The media creates myths to scare/manipulate people to believe something is going to happen when it isn’t true

CONDITIONS OF CONSUMPTION

propaganda model


The propaganda model is a model by Noam Chomsky and Edward S. Herman in the political economy that explains how populations are manipulated and how consent for economic, social and political policies is manufactured. The model states that there are five factors which aid the media in doing this, these include: Structures of ownership, The role of advertising, Links with ‘The Establishment’, Diversionary tactics – ‘flack’ and Uniting against a ‘common enemy’. 

  • Structures of ownership – includes who owns which companies, eg 71% of UK newspapers are owned by 4 companies 
  • The role of advertising – selected advertisements shaped specifically to  individuals to persuade them  
  • Links with ‘The Establishment’ 
  • Diversionary tactics – ‘flack’
  • Uniting against a ‘common enemy’ – by finding a common enemy between the media and the consumer, they can bond over something possibly leading to the consumer believing more of what the media is say

MANUFACTURING CONSENT

-1988 book by Noam Chomsky and Edward S Herman

-The authors propose that the mass communication of the media of the US are effective and powerful and ideological institutions that carry out a system-supportive propaganda function. This is said to be by reliance on market forces, internalized assumptions and and self-censorship.

-The book was revised 20 years after is first publication to take account of developments such as the fall of the Soviet Union. There has been debate about how the internet has changed the public’s access to information since 1988.

Noam Chomsky- the five filters of the mass media machine:

  1. Ownership: The first has to do with ownership. The endgame of mass media firms is profit. Critical journalism must take second place to the needs and interests of the corporation.
  2. Advertising: The second filter exposes the real role of advertising. Media costs a lot more than consumers will ever pay. So who fills the gap? Advertisers. And what are the advertisers paying for? Audiences. And so it isn’t so much that the media are selling you a product — their output. They are also selling advertisers a product — YOU.
  3. The media elite: Governments, corporations, big institutions know how to play the media game. They know how to influence the news narrative. They feed media scoops, official accounts, interviews with the ‘experts’. Journalism cannot be a check on power because the very system encourages complicity, and it is said that those in power and those who report on them are in bed with each other.
  4. Flak:  When the media – journalists, whistleblowers, sources – stray away from the consensus, they get ‘flak’. This is the fourth filter. When the story is inconvenient for the powers that be, you’ll see the flak machine in action discrediting sources, trashing stories and diverting the conversation.
  5. The common enemy: To manufacture consent, you need an enemy — a target. That common enemy is the fifth filter. Communism. Terrorists. Immigrants. A common enemy, a bogeyman to fear, helps corral public opinion.

Agenda setting: Noam Chomsky defined agenda-setting as the “the tacit alliance between the government of a country (usually Western and especially U.S.) and the media to communicate to viewers, listeners or readers of a medium only what matters, and hide the most of what can be dangerous or detrimental to the stability they think right for their country.”

Framing: Framing involves social construction of a social phenomenon – by mass media sources, political or social movements, political leaders, or other actors and organizations.

manufacturing consent manipulation or persuasion

structures of ownership: where people with higher power know each other and use each other to generate profit.

the role of advertising: used to manipulate audience viewers get manipulated/persuaded by the information they are recieving from the media.

Links with the establishment: advertisers provide viewers plus profits to conglomerates and in return get the viewers

diversionary tactics-flack: being side lined by the media as you are opposing the medias original beliefs e.g carroll caldwalldor has been sued by major tech companies due to her opposing and going against these companies.

uniting against a common enemy: media persuading audiences to support or oppose a certain thing or person e.g. media being persuaded to vote for trump in the elections.

agenda setting: creation of public awareness and concern of the big issues by the news media. media attempts to influence viewers and attempts to establish a hierarchy of news importance

framing: how something is presented to the audience influences the choices that people make about how to process that information.

myth making: the influence of agenda setting and framing can create myths- common beliefs in the media about how the world should be the things we value and how we must act to become correct.

conditions of consumption: so we have media that has been framed and presented to us in order to meet an agenda or support a myth.

gender setting

agender setting: perceived as the most important problems and issues facing a society.

framing: framing one story to make it look more important than the other

myth making: making a statement that is not necessarily correct/true

conditions of consumption: sum of information and entertainment taken in by an individual or group.

MANIPULATION AND PERSUASION

large companies work with other companies and agree on things that benefit each other rather than actually focusing on their audience.

  • structures –
  • the role of advertisement – advertisement is the whole process of manipulation and persuasion as it tries get you into buying products/services
  • links with The Establishment –
  • Uniting against a common enemy –