Radio | War of the Worlds | Newsbeat |
Summary | Orson Welles’ adaption of “The War of the Worlds” provides a terrific introduction to the debate surrounding the media’s ability to influence the audience and shape our behaviour and beliefs. Performed live in 1938, the radio drama depicted a Martian invasion of earth, but the broadcast allegedly provoked widespread panic because many listeners thought the attack was real. | Broadcasting since 1973 on BBC Radio 1, Newsbeat promises its younger listeners all the news they need to know from the UK and around the world. The energetic presenters ensure complex issues remain accessible to the target audience through their informal mode of address, interactive games, and audience participation, but can this traditional format continue to compete against podcasts and streaming apps? |
Key Facts | Although the story of interplanetary warfare is typical of the science fiction genre, it was presented within the format of normal evening of radio programming. There appears to be a routine report from the “Government Weather Bureau” about a “slight atmospheric disturbance” along the east coast of America. We are then “entertained by the music of Ramón Raquello and his orchestra” who are playing a tango from the Park Plaza Hotel. Even the “special bulletin from the Intercontinental Radio News”, which interrupts the music, met the expectations of the contemporary audience. First, “The War of the Worlds” was aired by Columbia Broadcasting Systems (CBS) – one of only two national broadcasters who were trusted by millions of listeners every day to deliver reliable and impartial news. It is also important to note that CBS frequently interrupted scheduled programmes to inform their listeners of the latest updates from Europe. In the weeks prior to “The War of the Worlds” episode, the network reported on Hitler’s continued occupation Czechoslovakia and the inevitability of another global conflict. | The BBC is the largest public service broadcaster in the UK. According to the regulator, Ofcom, PSBs are tasked with “delivering impartial and trusted news, UK-originated programmes and distinctive content”. The BBC’s mission is outlined in its charter. The corporation has to provide “impartial, high-quality and distinctive output and services which inform, educate and entertain”. Newsbeat certainly satisfies these requirements with its focus on current affairs. The main fifteen-minute Newsbeat programmes are transmitted live over digital audio broadcast (DAB) frequencies at 12:45 and 17:45 during most weekdays. You can listen to the latest stories, entertainment gossip and sport headlines by tuning into Radio 1, 1Xtra and the Asian Network. This simultaneous transmission is known as a simulcast. There are also shorter bulletins broadcast throughout the day, usually at thirty-minute intervals. |
Key Words | Moral Panic, Genre, Hybrid Genre, Narrative, Science fiction trope, Hypodermic needle theory, Gerbner, cultivaion theory, Reception Theory, Stuart Hall, Encoding, Decoding, | Reception Theory, Stuart Hall, Encoding, Decoding, the dominant, oppositional, and negotiated readings, |
Talking Points | By incorporating these basic radio codes into the start of the script, it is clear the writers were trying to make the story sound plausible. According to Baudrillard’s simulation theory, this would be the first stage which is a “reflection of reality”. The New York Times reported “a wave of mass hysteria seized thousands of radio listeners” with some adults requiring “medical treatment for shock and hysteria”. Apparently, “thousands of persons” phoned different agencies “seeking advice on protective measures against the raids” The hypodermic needle theory suggests a media text can have a powerful and immediate effect on the passive audience. It would seem “The War of the Worlds” production supports this argument because so many terrified listeners, for example, “rushed out of their houses” to escape the “gas raid”. The mode of consumption could also explain their lack of awareness. Some listeners may not have been fully engaged with the message because the radio was only background noise while they did other things in the house. However, the special bulletins grabbed their attention long enough for them to think New York was being attacked. | The BBC is often accused of political bias because it seems to reinforce a more liberal ideology. There have been plenty of commentators and government ministers who have called for the institution to be defunded and forced into the private sector to compete against subscription services and other channels which rely on advertising revenues. These critics question why the public should pay a licence fee when we spend most of our time online. |
Introductions |
All posts by Sarah Browne
Filters
Newspaper Revisit – The i + The Daily Mail
Newspaper | The i | The Daily Mail |
Summary | Launched in 1896 by Lord Northcliffe, the Daily Mail is an award-winning newspaper which aims to deliver the latest headlines and compelling content to its millions of readers every day – the highest circulation in the United Kingdom. It has also been heavily criticised for its sensationalist reporting and there have been many successful lawsuits brought against the publisher, especially for libel damages. | |
Key Facts | ||
Key Words | Liberal Free Press, Noam Chomsky, James Curran, Jean Seaton, George Gerbner, Mean World Index | Liberal Free Press, Noam Chomsky, James Curran, Jean Seaton, George Gerbner, Mean World Index, uses and grats, Maslow’s hierarchy of needs, |
Talking Points | Leaning towards left wing + Libertarian | |
Introductions |
Advertisement Revisit – Score + That Boss Life
Advertisement | Score | That Boss Life |
Summary | Published in 1967, the representation reinforces negative gender stereotypes with its portrayal of the powerful and dominant man who conquers the passive and subservient women. | |
Key Facts | ||
Key Words | David Gauntlett, Judith Butler, Richard Dyer, Myth, Barthes, Claude Lévi-Strauss, Van Zoonen, bel hooks, encoding/decoding, negotiated reading, intersectionality, Charles Peirce’s Triadic Model of Communication | David Gauntlett, Judith Butler, Richard Dyer, Myth, Barthes, Claude Lévi-Strauss, Van Zoonen, bel hooks, encoding/decoding, negotiated reading, intersectionality, Charles Peirce’s Triadic Model of Communication |
Talking Points | A number of signifiers help encode this preferred reading. First, the man is positioned at the top of the mise-en-scène, connoting his higher status, and the fact he is being carried on a litter could even suggest a god-like superiority. The rifle, which is propped casually in his manly arms, has obvious connotations of violent power and adventure. Presumably, this is weapon he used to subdue and dominate this new world. The indexical animal skin is evidence of his success. Finally, notice how his short-sleeved shirt reveals his muscular arms. This is a man who is ready to fight. | It reflects the fluidity of gender identities and how values and ideology are never fixed. (Gauntlett). The most obvious signifier is the colour gold. It is introduced on the title card “That Boss Life” and on the label “Big Shot Mascara”. The producers then direct the viewer’s attention to the gold suitcase on the trolley by making it stand out among the other pastel-coloured cases and tracking the camera so it dominates the mise-en-scène. When Manny and Shayla open the suitcase, it reveals a divine light. The angelic sound effect, an important aural code in the text, and their positive reaction reinforces the mental concept of beauty and bliss. |
Introductions |
Games Revisit – Tomb Raider + Metroid + Sims Freeplay
Game | Tomb Raider | Metroid | Sims Freeplay |
Summary | Lara Croft is one of the most recognisable protagonists in computer games. Her agility and confidence offered a counter representation to the passive female characters that were found in most other titles, but some critics believed she was a negative role model for young people because her ridiculous body shape reduced her to an object that appealed to male gaze. | ||
Key Facts | …watching Tomb Raider… might encourage girls to become somewhat more independent and feisty, without them needing to directly copy an extensive fight sequence, embark on a perilous quest for ancient artifacts… David Gauntlett | ||
Key words | Jarod Lanier, Socialisation, Regulation, Utopian Possibilities, David Gauntlett, Henry Jenkins, Privacy, Baudrillard | Jarod Lanier, Socialisation, Regulation, Utopian Possibilities, David Gauntlett, Henry Jenkins, Privacy, Baudrillard | Jarod Lanier, Socialisation, Regulation, Utopian Possibilities, David Gauntlett, Henry Jenkins, Privacy, Baudrillard |
Talking points | |||
Introductions |
Introduction.
Theorists such as Jarod Lanier, Baudrillard, Henry Jenkins all in one way or another have a say on New Media. I would also like to include David Gauntlett in the discussion on video games.
Online News Revisit – Teen Vogue + The Voice
Online News Source | Teen Vogue | The Voice |
Summary | Teen Vogue wants to be “the young person’s guide to conquering (and saving) the world”. The magazine originally featured lots of stories about fashion, celebrity gossip and beauty advice, but its broader focus on social issues and politics has been a hit with young activists. Edging out entertainment, politics became the website’s “most trafficked vertical” in 2017 | First published in 1982, The Voice newspaper is “committed to celebrating black experience” and aims to deliver “positive change” by “informing the black community on important issues”. With its news stories, in-depth interviews, opinion pieces and investigations, The Voice remains “Britain’s most successful black newspaper” |
Key Facts | ||
Key words | Deregulation, Innovation, Theory of preferred reading, Jarod Lanier, Privacy, Clay Shirky, Cultivation, Mean World Index, Utopian Possibilities | Deregulation, Innovation, Theory of preferred reading, Jarod Lanier, Privacy, Clay Shirky, Cultivation, Mean World Index, Utopian Possibilities |
Talking points | ||
Introductions |
TV Revisit – Capital + Deutschland 83
TV | Capital | Deutschland 83 |
Summary | Set during the rising tensions of the Cold War and the threat of nuclear annihilation, “Deutschland 83” is an entertaining spy story with lots of action and suspense. Martin Rauch, a young and wide-eyed border guard, is forced to go undercover for the German Secret Service to find out if America’s missile deployments and military exercises are actually the first moves towards another global conflict. | |
Key Facts | Winning an International Emmy Award and several prestigious domestic television accolades, “Deutschland 83” was the first German-language series broadcast on a US network. It is also one of the most popular foreign-language dramas aired on British television | |
Key words | equilibrium, genre, public sphere, hybrid genre, Stuart hall, reception theory, PSB, BBC | equilibrium, genre, public sphere, hybrid genre, Stuart hall, reception theory, PSB, BBC |
Talking points | ||
Introductions |
Revision
media studies website – all info from this
Themes
Television – Deutschland 83 + Capital – Media Language Media Representations Media Industries Media Audiences – Social, political, economic, cultural PAPER 2
Radio – Newsbeat + War of the Worlds – Media Industries Media Audiences – Historical, social, political, cultural PAPER 1
Video Game – Tomb Raider + Metroid + Sims FreePlay – Media Language Media Representations Media Industries Media Audiences – Social, cultural PAPER 2
Advertisements – Maybelline (That Boss Life) + Score – Media Language Media Representations – Historical, social, cultural PAPER 1
Newspaper – The Daily Mail + The i – Media Industries Media Audiences – Social, political, economic, cultural PAPER 1
Magazine – Oh Comely + Men’s Health – Media Language Media Representations Media Industries Media Audiences – Social, cultural PAPER 2
Online news sites – The Voice + Teen Vogue – Media Language Media Representations Media Industries Media Audiences – Social, political, economic, cultural PAPER 2
Music Video – Letter to the Free + Ghost Town – Media Language Media Representations – Historical, social, political, economic, cultural PAPER 1
Film – Blinded by the Light – Media Industries – Social, economic, cultural PAPER 1
Theorists
semiotics
narrative
representation
bell hooks – hooks was born Gloria Jean Watkins, she chose her pen name to honor her late grandmother, Bell Blair Hooks. But, hooks said she preferred to have her first and last name written with all lowercase letters, to focus on her message rather than herself.
industries
audience
Key words
Vertical Integration – When a single company owns most of the chain of production for media text.
Horizontal Integration – A company buys a competitor in the same sector.
Further exam question revision
http://lr-media.blogspot.com/2018/09/theorists-and-theories.html
practise
Some theorists like Clay Shirky and Baudrillard say that media products may or may not be shaped by political and economic contexts. Baudrillard says that in postmodern culture the boundaries between the ‘real’ world and the world of the media have collapsed and that it is no longer possible to distinguish between what is reality and what is simulation. This may make media products come across as superficial in new media. An example of this would be from a close study product I have studied: Teen Vogue. An article published on the 25th January regarding whether UV light was safe for nails has come across as a superficial article as some may read the title of the article and question as to why other important issues around the world aren’t being covered like the recent earthquake in Syria costing thousands of people their lives and destroying the lives of those fortunate enough to still be alive. Baudrillard would say that since the postmodern world is like a simulation there may be no deeper meaning to media products anymore and that they are rather surfaced or shallow. Teen Vogue may produce articles like this as they will have learnt their audiences interests therefore will produce what they want in order to boost Teen Vogue economically.
On the other hand, another theorist Clay Shirky argued audience behaviour has progressed from the passive consumption of media texts to a much more interactive experience with the products and each other. Looking at the same article previously mentioned from the csp Teen Vogue, deeper into the article, it discusses matters such as developing skin cancer and how UV light can be a contributing factor to that. In the article there are subheadings which are set out like rhetorical questions and using first person pronouns like “I” to include the reader. This is to encourage involvement and participation within the audience. The article even includes links to medical research articles to promote further reading for the audience. Henry Jenkins theory of fandoms heavily supports active consumption. Fandoms are based on the ideology that individuals will go further than what a media producer specifically produces a media product for. This is sometimes referred to as ‘textual poaching’, fans construct their social and cultural identities through borrowing and utilising mass culture images. This assists media producers economically as these individuals then take ‘boosting the product’ out of the media producers hands.
Another CSP I studied was The Voice Online, which I personally don’t believe uses their products solely for economic purposes. Their articles are focused on black British individuals. The media producers from The Voice make it clear that they know who their ‘fans’ will be. This is due to all their products being related to news regarding black British individuals. They share political and historical stories to educate and engage their audience. An article I read, published on the 7th of February titled ‘Wealthy British family to pay reparations to Grenada for links to slavery’ clearly depicts they want to share successes to their preferred demographic. Upon looking at the Voice I also noticed they did not cover the disastrous earthquake in Syria which has led me to believe that News outlets will not cover news stories that they deem unsuitable for their target audience, this is because they will not achieve the active consumption and participation Clay Shirky talks so much about.
In conclusion, I agree with the view to an extent. I think that in a postmodern world media producers will produce what they see fit to their audience even if it means straying away from relevant economical and political views that are generalisable to the whole world. Both Teen Vogue and The Voice are evidence of this.
Possible questions for Wednesday
Media producers must respond to changing social and cultural contexts to maintain audiences.
To what extent does an analysis of the online Close Study Products The Voice and Teen Vogue support this view? (25) audience, social and cultural theorists
Roland Barthes – Semiotics Media products communicate a complex series of meanings to their audiences through a range of visual codes and technical codes. These codes can broadly be divided in to proairetic, symbolic, hermeneutic, referential, and so on.
• After many years of codes being repeated, their meaning can become generally agreed upon by society. For example, a scar on the face of a character can function as a hermeneutic code, indicating to the audience that they are ‘the villain’.
• Barthes also considered the importance of myths. Myths are stories and legends, which are passed down from generation to generation. They teach us why the world is the way it is, and also offer clues and instructions on how we behave. For example, in Greek myth of Narcissus, Narcissus was a particularly beautiful young man who turned down every woman as they didn’t live up to his expectations. After he ignored Echo for so long, she faded away in to nothing, and became just a voice in the breeze. This is where echoes come from. Narcissus was punished, and was led to fall in love with his own reflection. When he realised that he could consummate his love with himself, he killed himself. This myth warns the listener to not be so self-obsessed, and it is even where we get the term ‘narcissist’ from
• For Barthes, the myths of modern society can be found in media products. Whereas previously we would learn from legends, now we are more likely to discover social norms and values from advertising. For Barthes, a myth is a widely held belief which is reinforced and emphasised through media language. This concept is closely related to hegemony and stereotypes.
Stuart Hall – Theories of representation Representations are constructed through media language, and reflect the ideological perspective of the producer
• The relationship between concepts and signs is governed by codes
• Stereotyping, as a form of representation, reduces people to a few simple characteristics or traits. However, stereotyping is useful, as it allows producers to easily construct media products, and audiences to easily decode them.
• Stereotyping tends to occur where there are inequalities of power, as subordinate or excluded groups are constructed as different or ‘other’ (e.g. through ethnocentrism).
The target audiences for video games change because of the historical and economic contexts in which they are produced.
To what extent does an analysis of the Close Study Products Tomb Raider: Anniversary and The Sims FreePlay support this statement? (25) audience theorists
George Gerbner – Cultivation theory Being exposed to repeated patterns of representation over long periods of time can shape and influence the way in which people perceive the world around them (i.e. cultivating particular views and opinions)
• This process of cultivation reinforces mainstream hegemonic values (dominant ideologies).
David Gauntlett –
Stuart Hall – Reception theory To watch/read/play/listen to/consume a media product is a process involving encoding by producers and decoding by audiences
• There are millions of possible responses that can be affected through factors such as upbringing, cultural capital, ethnicity, age, social class, and so on
• Hall narrowed this down to three ways in which messages and meanings may be decoded:
• The preferred reading – the dominant-hegemonic position, where the audience understands and accepts the ideology of the producer
• The negotiated reading – where the ideological implications of producer’s message is agreed with in general, although the message is negotiated or picked apart by the audience, and they may disagree with certain aspects
• The oppositional reading – where the producer’s message is understood, but the audience disagrees with the ideological perspective in every respect
Katz and Larzasfeld –
Bandura – Media effects This old-fashioned view of how media products effect audiences is associated with the Frankfurt School in Germany
• The effects model suggests that media can implant ideas in the mind of the audience directly. It is also known as the hypodermic needle model
• Audiences acquire attitudes, emotional responses and behaviours through media products modelling ideologies
• If a media product represents behaviour such as violence or physical aggression, this can lead audience members to imitate those forms of behaviour
• This model has many issues, though it still proves popular with the general public, newspapers and politicians who should frankly read a media studies textbook or two.
B.F. Skinner –
Clay Shirky – ‘End of audience’ theories New media, as in the Internet and digital technologies, have had a significant effect on the relations between media and audiences
• Just thinking of audience members as passive consumers of mass media content is no longer possible in the age of the Internet. Now, media consumers have become producers who ‘speak back to’ the media in various ways, creating and sharing content with one another.
• This can be accomplished through comments sections, internet forums, and creating media products such as blogs or vlogs
X – However, this theory can and should be criticised. Arguably the media industries are just as exclusionary as they always ave been, and audiences are less ‘producers’ than ‘unwitting advertisers’., promoting pre-existing products through retweets, fan accounts and derivative vlogs that could never be financially successful without aggressive monetisation!
McLuhan –
Baudrillard – Postmodernism In postmodern culture the boundaries between the ‘real’ world and the world of the media have collapsed and that it is no longer possible to distinguish between what is reality and what is simulation. In fact, it really doesn’t matter which is which!
• Therefore, in this postmodern age of simulacra, audiences are constantly bombarded with images which no longer refer to anything ‘real’
• Because of this, we are now in a situation that media images have come to seem more ‘real’ than the reality they supposedly represent. This concept is referred to as ‘hyperreality’
Henry Jenkins – Fandom Fandom refers to a particularly organised and motivated audience of a certain media producer franchise
• Unlike the generic audience or the classic spectator, fans are active participants in the construction and circulation of textual meanings
• Fans appropriate texts and read them in ways that are not fully intended by the media producers (‘textual poaching’). Examples of this may manifest in conventions, fan fiction and so on
• Rather than just play a videogame or watch a TV show, fans construct their social and cultural identities through borrowing and utilising mass culture images, and may use this ‘subcultural capital’ to form social bonds. For example, through online forums like Reddit or 4chan.
Media products are shaped by the economic and political contexts in which they are created.
To what extent does an analysis of your online, social and participatory Close Study Products (The Voice and Teen Vogue) support this view? (25) economic and political theorists
Saussure – Concept of semiotics and language (linguistics) 1974 – the extended connotations of within a cultural system.
- THE SIGNIFIER – The sign: a word, colour or image (i.e. the colour BLUE)
- THE SIGNIFIED – The concept/ meaning/associations that the sign refers to (i.e. BLUE is often associated with sadness or the sea etc.) https://www.teenvogue.com/story/uv-light-for-nails-safety
The Voice CSP
The Voice, founded in 1982, is a British national African-Caribbean newspaper operating in the United Kingdom. The paper is based in London and was published every Thursday until 2019 when it became monthly. It is available in a paper version by subscription and also online. It is owned by GV Media Group Limited, and is aimed at the British African-Caribbean community.
Selection Criteria
Online, social and participatory – news website, produced by and targeting a minority group
The Voice online was a printed newspaper and then moved to online articles in 2016.
The aim of the voice online is to give a positive voice to black British citizens. This is evident in their articles. There is an article titled ‘Black women’s wellbeing takes centre stage in new social media campaign’ published on 30th January 2023 written by Vic Motune which showcases the positivity being spread amongst people of colours achievements.The article is about a wellness campaign organised through social media for black women.
Sims Freeplay CSP
This is an in-depth CSP and needs to be studied with reference to all four elements of the Theoretical Framework (Language, Representation, Industries, Audience) and all relevant contexts.
You will need to study:
• the game
• its Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/thesimsfreeplay/
• its Twitter feed
https://twitter.com/TheSimsFreePlay?ref_src=twsrc%5Egoogle%7Ctwcamp%5Eserp%7Ctwgr%5Eauthor
What needs to be studied? Key Questions and Issues
Media Industries
The Sims FreePlay is a strategiclife simulation game developed by EA Mobile and later with Firemonkeys Studios. It is a freemium version of The Sims for mobile devices; it was released for iOS on December 15, 2011, released for Android on February 15, 2012, released for BlackBerry 10 on July 31, 2013, and released for Windows Phone 8 on September 12, 2013. Its is free to download but includes the possibility of in – app purchases. It is regualary updated offering players new content and the opportunity to interact with events and enter competitions.
The sims Freeplay is a game where any individuals can download for free if they have a compatible device(iOS or android). The game allows individuals to create characters that they call sims. These sims can be fully customised to however the individual is content with, a house can also be customised too. These sims can go through realistic life events and the player is able to live through it however they like to. This suggests some sort of simulation where a whole life can be lived through a game. According to Baudrillard, when it comes to postmodern simulation and simulacra, “It is no longer a question of imitation, nor duplication, nor even parody. It is a question of substituting the signs of the real for the real” This can be applied to our CSP The Sims Freeplay as the game is still being updated to present since being released on iOS to begin with in 2011.
Media Language
Both The Sims Freeplay Twitter and Facebook pages give consistent and frequent updates regarding the game. They also post if there are any issues with their game. They use informal language in a way in which they believe will connect with their gamers. “Hey Simmers” is what they used to begin one of their posts in order to address those individuals who play The Sims Freeplay game. The comments are always on for the posts allowing the players of the game to enquire and to give their opinion. This allows communication which is essential in new media and post modernism. This is because they wa
Media Audiences
Appeals to maternal instincts. taking care of, nurturing characters. Tedious tasks. Gives them full control over the world – women may play it in an attempt to get back control – which they lack in their own lives. Wide range of skin tones. outfits. hair types. potentially more left-wing – modern than previous games due to how much control is given to the game player in creating their world. Straight, bi, gay, trans are all possible. Main target age 10 – 40. However the recommended age for the game is for players aged 12 and over. The app gets its rating due to fantasy violence, partial nudity, sexual/suggestive content, and crude humour.
Media Regulation
Computer games in the UK are rated and regulated by the British Board of Film Classification (BBFC). They classify games according to age groups, taking account of a number of factors, including the game’s themes, language, violence, and content. The Sims FreePlay is rated 12 because it “may contain themes that are not suitable for younger children, such as the potential for violent fist fights and “woohoo”. The video game was banned in China, Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates, Oman, Kuwait, Qatar and Egypt due to the possibility of establishing a homosexual relationship.