KEY THEORISTS
- Hesmondhalgh (The Creative Industries)
- Curran and Seaton (Ownership)
- Livingstone and Lunt (Regulation)
The Culture Industries: similarities and differences to other industries
- Cultural industries are for entertainment more than they are functional. They are not a necessity to someone’s everyday life.
- Just like any other industry, cultural industries have a main focus or earning money.
- Cultural industries have the power to inform and provoke/influence beliefs/opinions which also helps to provoke popular culture – popular doesn’t always mean good.
- There is more freedom involved within media – versatile and unpredictable
- golding and murdoch- ” (media) plays a pivotal role in organizing the images and discourse through which people make sense of the world.”
Capitalist media – corporations content that address humans in various social roles and results in meaning-making.
- Funded through advertisements.
- No state obligations, private
- Audiences don’t have to pay
Public Service media – state-related institutions content that addresses humans in various social roles and results in meaning-making. (e.g BBC)
- Government is at an ‘arms length’ from the media, they don’t control it but advise and ‘look after’ the content, public.
- Funded by the public/ tax payer. Through TV License for BBC in the UK.
- No advertisements shown.
- Examples = BBC (British Broadcasting Corporation – Regional), Channel 4
Civil society media – citizen-control content that addresses humans in various social role and results in meaning-making.
- Has aspects of the company worldwide
- Examples = Netflix, Sony, Apple, Disney
Public service Broadcasting:
Q1) what is it?
– Broadcasting on electronic media outlets (radio, television) with the aim of serving the public.
– Funding usually comes from the government through tax payed by the receivers.
Q2) what’s good about it?
– No ads
– The bedrock is inform, educate and entertain.
– Its very diverse and caters to everyone.
– easily accessible
– its not biased
Q3) is it unique?
– familiar – part of national identity to the UK – trusted and supported by many and is a very unique form of PSB along with channel 4
Curran and Seaton:
- Commercial broadcasting is based on the sale of audiences to advertisers” – Commercial broadcasters (such as ITV) need to secure long term advertising revenue to survive programming. – Jean Seaton. – need for an active audience. – money wins (profit-driven)
- ”profit-driven motives take precedence over creativity in the world of commercial media”.
- “power without responsibility” – book by Curran and Seaton – first published in 1981- explores themes of how the media landscape has fallen under the control of the few global conglomerates.
- Benefits of Horizontal integration: Production costs can be minimised/ Sharing resources/ controlling the market (influential as they own most of the resources)
- Benefits of Vertical Integration: production divisions/distribution services/subsidiary support – finance and promotional services. control over all aspects of the production chain/restricting access to competitors/cross-media ownership synergies.
- Curran suggests that the relationships between big businesses and government – suggesting power of concentrated media ownership has forced political parties and form cosy relationships with the media. in order to get favourable press charge.