The Cultural Industries

There are many varied similarities and differences between the creative industries and the cultural industries.

  • Most industries, such as finance or food, pretty much all do the exact same thing. A product or service will be provided and distributed and people expect it to be the same each time. No useful information is obtained from these industries.
  • The creative industries are always different, as this is what people expect from the products they make. These products help people develop a greater understanding of the world around them.

Public Service Media – Funded by government who charge for TV licences. (BBC)

Commercial Media – Funded by advertisements (ITV)

Transnational Media – Netflix

Public Service Broadcasting

The primary mission of public broadcasting is that of public service, speaking to and engaging as a citizen. The British model has been widely accepted as a universal definition. The model embodies the following principles:

  • Universal geographic accessibility
  • Universal appeal
  • Attention to minorities
  • Contribution to national identity and sense of community
  • Distance from vested interests
  • Direct funding and universality of payment
  • Competition in good programming rather than numbers
  • Guidelines that liberate rather than restrict

The public service ethos of the BBC to inform, entertain and educate is something that we should fiercely protect and fund properly.”

Key words:

  1. Cultural industries
  2. Production
  3. Distribution
  4. Exhibition / Consumption
  5. Media concentration
  6. Conglomerates
  7. Globalisation (in terms of media ownership)
  8. Cultural imperialism
  9. Vertical Integration
  10. Horizontal Integration
  11. Mergers
  12. Monopolies
  13. Gatekeepers
  14. Regulation
  15. Deregulation
  16. Free market
  17. Commodification
  18. Convergence
  19. Diversity
  20. Innovation

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