culture industries

similarities – both businesses have the 3 elements, production distribution and consumption.

differences – more variety in culture industries

the cultural industry is clear that the goods they manufacture play a pivotal role in organising the images through which people make sense of the world – golding and murdock

The concept of “cultural industries” is more related to cultural heritage and traditional forms of creation, while “creative industries” includes the applied arts practices, innovations and generating profit and creation of jobs by creating intellectual property.

The cultural and creative industries refer to those parts of the modern economy where culture is produced and distributed through industrial means, applying the creativity of individuals and groups to the generation of original cultural product, which may have commercial value either through direct sale to consumers 

A cultural industry (sometimes used synonymously with creative industries) is an economic field concerned with producing, reproducing, storing, and distributing cultural goods and services on industrial and commercial terms.

the industries have a massive impact on people and our world.

examples :

capitalist – commercial itv

transnational – netflix, prime distributed among different countries

public service – bbc

PUBLIC SERVICE BROADCASTING

what is it ? – it is includes all electronic media outlets and its only function is public service. In many countries of the world, funding comes from governments, especially via annual fees charged on receivers (TV licence UK). Television and radio programmes that are broadcast to provide information, advice, or entertainment to the public without trying to make a profit: The channel is trying to reduce its obligations to produce public service broadcasting such as religious programmes. The public service ethos of the BBC to inform, entertain and educate is something that we should fiercely protect and fund properly.

Are the BBC and C4 unique examples of PSB?

The BBC is a public service broadcaster. This means that, in return for payment of a licence fee , the BBC provide viewers with a service of programmes with wide appeal that are guaranteed to conform to its public service remit to ‘inform, educate, and entertain.”

Channel 4 is a publicly-owned and commercially-funded UK Public Service Broadcaster (PSB), with a statutory remit to deliver high-quality, innovative, alternative content that challenges the status quo.

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