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Men’s Health Magazines

Hearst publishing is a multinational conglomerate which publishes men’s health and a range of other fashion and lifestyle magazines. Developments in new technologies mean that many of their brands are now online as well as in print.

Hearst owns newspapers, magazines, television channels, and television stations such as the san Francisco chronicle, the Houston chronicle , cosmopolitan and esquire.

The company was founded by William Randolph Hearst.

Hearst is a leading global, diversified information, services and media company with operations in 40 countries.
has major interests such as
– Financial services leader Fitch group.
– Hearst Health (group of medical information and services businesses)
– Hearst transportation, including CAMP systems international, major provider of software solutions for managing maintenance of jets and helicopters
– Ownership in cable television networks such as A&E

The men’s health magazine had an average monthly reach of around 1.8 million individuals in the united Kingdom from April 2019 to march 2020.
The reach was lower among households with children.

WHO = Hearst communication, men’s health, editor – Morgan Rees
SAYS WHAT = They want greater control over their physical and mental lives
CHANNEL = print through lifestyle magazine, also online (website)
TO WHOM = Active men, professional men and educated with families.
WITH WHAT EFFECT = To sell magazines.

The men’s health magazines are lined to Paul Lazarsfeld as the audience consumes the magazine as a product are passive. This means they are passively consuming the information on the magazine.

what uses and gratification

You can see escapism on the Hugo boss advert as the consumer will use this magazine to escape and get away. It gives the consumer self confidence, stability and self-esteem, by using the same product that the influencer/celebrity is shown to be represented alongside the product.

  • Dominant
  • Negotiate
  • Opposition
    Stuart hall says these are the 3 ways people can interpret something from the media.

If you are dominant, you would accept the features and meaning behind the men’s health magazine.

If you are negotiated, the u see two sides towards and you understand the meaning behind it but also see the consequences of it, such as men feeling pressure to now look like the man on the front cover.

If you have a oppositional view, you don’t see the purpose of the men’s health magazine and wouldn’t sell you.

People that view the media on a person, influencer or world leader don’t have their own personal view on them due to how the media represents them. The media chooses how those people are viewed to the audiences that watches it. Even though those audiences haven’t spoken to or actually met that person in real life.

George Gerbner
cultivation theory:
the media influences our ideas and opinion. IN the first instance, reception theory, suggests that exposure to reinforced messages will influence our ideas, attributes, and beliefs

Media Industries (Audience)

Hearst – Hearst is a leading global, diversified information, services and media company with operations in 40 countries. A major provider of software-as-a-service solutions for managing maintenance of jets and helicopters; ownership in cable television networks such as A&E, HISTORY, Lifetime and ESPN; 33 television stations; 24 daily and 52 weekly newspapers; digital services businesses; and nearly 260 magazines around the world.

We are committed to fairly and fully reflecting diversity everywhere Hearst operates, fostering equity and respect and continuously expanding our efforts. Reporting on important issues and elevating diverse voices moves us forward.

Hearst, is an American multinational mass media and business information conglomerate based in Hearst Tower in Midtown Manhattan, New York City.

Monthly reach of Men’s Health magazine in the united kingdom from April 2019 to March 2020, by demographic group

Adults 15+1,816
Men708
Women365
Adults 15-34519
Adults 35+ 554
Households with children391

The Big Dangers of ‘Bigorexia’

Muscle dysmorphia a psychological disorder marked by an obsessive desire for a jacked physique is on the rise.

Social media is exacerbating the problem, but it may also offer new solutions. Picture of Clean eating challenge for weight loss.

Relates to Steve Neal as they have talked about the subject to reflect on world effects and the needs of audience.

revison

mens health 5 step

1. who (sender) – Hearst communications Richord Dorman

2. says what (message) – give men control over physical mental and emotional lives

3. channel (medium) – print magazine, website, socials

4. to whom (receiver) –

Mens health

Mens Health magazine average age of consumers have been displayed on a demographic graph that shows the ages of the readers from April 2019 to March 2020:

  • The most common age is adults aged 15+
  • 365 woman
  • 519 adults aged 15-34
  • 554 adults aged 35+
  • 391 readers with households with children

On the ABC website they have created a circulation analysis stating how readers have consumed their Men’s Health magazines dating from January to December 2021:

  • 21,871 paid single copies
  • 66,428 paid subscriptions
  • 338 paid multiple copies
  • 0 membership copies
  • 1,174 free copies

Also, the data shows that nearly 75% of the sold products have been print copies compared to 25% being digital copies

Men’s Health magazine had a joint ownership in from 2012 – 2017 with Hearst and Rodale owning it. Also, from 2000 – 2011 Men’s Health was owned by Natmag Rodale

Hearst (owners of Men’s Health) own a gender opposite magazine named Woman’s Health which has a very similar style as Men’s Health but uses stereotypical colours like pink to attract and gain woman consumers. The Woman’s Health magazine also includes a dominant signifier of an attractive model which creates the same idea of ‘if you read this magazine you will look like this’.

Hearst

  • Men’s Health is owned by Hearst who own many other companies such as: NetDoctor, Lenny Letter, Delish (25% owned)
  • Hearst is a media company founded on March 4 1887
  • Hearst own many different consumer magazines other than men’s health. Most other magazines they own are based on woman’s interests with magazines such as, Woman’s Health, Good Housekeeping, Best

Front page:

  • Dominant signifier – Vin Diesel – known in fast and furious (movie with target audience for men)
  • The page is reactionary, as it can be argued to support the typical view of strong, independent men
  • The font is in bold which can come across as stronger and more masculine
  • The common use of the colour blue links to masculinity (stereotypical colour for men)
  • The posture and stance of Vin Diesel is very masculine by displaying his muscular features
  • Vocabulary used is related to fitness and states the product is for ‘men’
  • Gives the idea to men that by reading this magazine makes you look like Vin Diesel

revision

command words

describe – remembering specific elements

compare – talking about the similarities and differences between two things

evaluate – to judge and share own opinions/ real evidence

analyse – in depth look at an idea with accurate explanation

knowledge – vague outline of an idea or concept / can touch on it

understanding – to explain clearly and deeply about an idea or concept / can evaluate it

what do you know aboutwhat meaning or understanding do you have of their ideas? how can you apply those ideas to your CSP’s?
Noam Chomskythe 5 filters of media:
– ownership
-advertising
-official source
-flack
-marginalizing dissent
ownership-
advertising- Maybelline and score. and how they are structured to sell the project.
official source- making sure what you are reading or referencing is true (newspapers) the I and they daily mail.
James Curranpatterns of ownership
media distribution
social and political change
he talks about ownership and how different companies will have different
Habermaslinked to Curran
public sphere
talks about how media is passively consumed
semiotics
The study of signs and symbols
Roland Barthes
CS Pierce
Ferdinand De Saussure
 
Textual analysis is needed
radical– something you wouldn’t expect / out of the ordinary
reactionary-what you would expect/ follows stereotypes
Sign– something which can stand for something else
Code– technical, written and symbolic tools which used to construct or suggest meaning in media forms.
Convention– accepted ways of using media codes
Dominant Signifier– the main representative.
Anchorage-words with an image to provide context
 
Roland Barthes
Talks about how culture and communication maintain  things such as myths and ideology
 
CS Pierce
How signs and symbols can have different meanings
Icon-physically resembles thing or idea
Index-A sign that has a link to its object
Symbol-Symbol, a sign that has an arbitrary or random link to its object
 
Ferdinand De Saussure
talks about
David Gauntletrepresentation
fluidity of identity
4 types of identity
collective identity- that is what is expected as a man
constructive identity – changing their identity when they are influenced by the magazine
negotiated identity- when reading or influenced
fluid identity-
Lasswellhypodermic needle model who developed the theoretical tool of ‘content analysis’ and in 1927 wrote Propaganda Technique in the World War which highlighted the brew of ‘subtle poison, which industrious men injected into the veins of a staggering people until the smashing powers . . . knocked them into submission’
To illustrate his hypothesis, in 1948 he developed a linear model of communication one that breaks down the line of communication from point A to point B, in which the SENDER is transferring a MESSAGE, through a MEDIUM (eg Print, radio, TV, etc) that has a direct effect on the RECEIVER. 
This approach was later adapted by Shannon and Weaver in 1949, as the Transmission model of Communication, NOISE, ERROR, ENCODING and FEEDBACK.
Lazarfeldtwo-step flow theory
Personal Influence (1955). The book explains that people’s reactions to media messages are mediated by interpersonal communication with members of their social environment.
suggests that opinion leaders pay close attention to the mass media and pass on their interpretation of media messages to others

The Two Step Flow Theory maintains that audiences are active participants in the communication process
Uses and Gratifications The Uses and Gratifications Theory is a Mass Communication theory that focuses on the needs, motives and gratifications of media users. The theory states that media consumers are passive consumers of mass communications; rather, they play an active role in media consumptionSome people might watch news for information, some for entertainment, and some for self-reassurance
media companies profit off what the audience enjoys, capitalism doesn’t care about race or gender only in making money and to do that they tailor their products to appeal to their audience, so they keep consuming it.
Stuart Hall media consumers were alert and critical readers, listeners and viewers
encoding and decoding
hegemony- the set of ideas that dominate within society these ideas are usually formed by those groups who have power.

CSP – Magazines | Men’s Health

[Page 1]

Semiotics
Dominant Signifier – (iconic) Vin Diesel

Print Language

Narrative

Genre

The genre may be considered as a practical device for helping any mass medium to produce consistently and efficiently and to relate its production to the expectations of its customers.” – Dennis McQuail

genre is lifestyle magazine (aimed at men’s lifestyle) – all paradigm of signs which connote to the idea of manliness/masculinity – fulfilling genre expectations according to Neale ( genre is structured around a repertoire of elements,  which attracts audience based on their predictable expectations)

Representation – (reactionary) muscular, heterosexual male with a dominant stance

[Page 17]
[Page 101]

The School of Life video: How to be a Man, presents the ‘cool man’ and the ‘warm man’. This links to Gauntlett’s notion that identity is fluid and negotiated. Although this is not a theory, we can see examples of the ‘cool man’ and the ‘warm man’ in Men’s Health.

For instance, on page

Lasswell’s Model of Communications

WHO?
Hearst Communications (Steven R. Swartz – C.E.O.)
Men’s Health (Richard Dorment – Chief Editor)
SAYS WHAT?
IN WHICH CHANNEL?
print (lifestyle magazine)
digital (websites, social media)
TO WHOM?
“active, successful, professional men who want greater control over their physical, mental and emotional lives”
WITH WHAT EFFECT?

Lazarsfeld’s Two-Step Flow Theory

Vin Diesel is an ‘opinion leader’ who people will actively choose to follow and listen to. By being situated on the front cover of Men’s Health, he influences his ‘opinion followers’ to read the magazine.

[Page 21]

Uses and Gratifications

PERSONAL NEEDS
Understanding Self
Enjoyment
Escapism

SOCIAL NEEDS
Knowledge About The World
Self Confidence, Stability, Self Esteem
Strengthen Connections With Family
Strengthen Connections With Friends

Stuart Hall’s Theory of Representation

revision table

(in workbook) *insert photo*

Stuart Hall- Hall’s work covers issues of hegemony and cultural studies taking a post-Gramscian stance. He regards language-use as operating within a framework of power, institutions and politics/economics. This view presents people as producers and consumers of culture at the same time. (Hegemony, in Gramscian theory, refers to the socio-cultural production of “consent” and “coercion”.)

For Hall, culture was not something to simply appreciate or study, but a “critical site of social action and intervention, where power relations are both established and potentially unsettled”.

hegemony- leadership and dominance

In Gramsci’s view, a class cannot dominate in modern conditions by merely advancing its own narrow economic interests

active audience

3 different ways of reading

He created the reception theory which was ‘what we see is simply a ‘re-presentation’ of what producers want us to see.’

George Gerbner

Gerbner’s Cultivation Theory: A key theoretical debate is the extent to which the media influence our ideas and opinions. In the first instance, RECEPTION THEORY (developed by George Gerbner based around research on TV viewing) suggests that exposure to reinforced messages will influence our ideas, attitudes and beliefs.

The George Gerbner Model of Communication is an extension of Lasswel’s communication model. Gerbner’s model consists of a verbal aspect, where someone observes an event and gives feedback about the situation, and a schematic model where someone perceives an event and sends messages to the sender.

You know, who tells the stories of a culture really governs human behaviour. It used to be the parent, the school, the church, the community. Now it’s a handful of global conglomerates that have nothing to tell, but a great deal to sell.”- Gerbner

Passive audience

Mainstream: Mainstreaming is the view that people’s life experiences may moderate the cultivation effect

mean world syndrome: the belief that the world is more violent and brutal than it really is. the effect that depictions of violence can have on the perceptions of those who view them

David Gauntlet

 Gauntlett believes that while everyone is an individual, people tend to exist within larger groups who are similar to them. He thinks the media do not create identities, but just reflect them instead. “Identity is complicated; everyone’s got one.”

Pick and Mix theory: it allows audiences to pick which aspects of a text they want to construct their identity, whole leaving other bits well alone

Fluidity of identity, constructed identity, negotiated identity, collective identity.

He assumed there was a generational divide in attitudes towards gender roles, but older people were less likely to be exposed to the new liberal representations of masculinity and femininity. He also wondered if this younger demographic would “grow up to be the narrow-minded traditionalists of the future”.

mens health

  1. Dominant signifier (Vin Diesel), we know this because he is the main focus within the front cover, being the biggest and most outward object on the page.
  2. The title “Men’s Health” – indexical to men’s health and the gender performance of the male gender.
  3. The page is reactionary, as it can be argued to support the typical view of strong, independent men.
  4. The syntagm of men’s gender performance and what men should be like. Suggests that men should be fit and strong with muscular developments. “Lose 8kg fast”, “127 ways to build a stronger core” “103 shortcuts to t-shirt arms”
  5. The way he’s standing (stance) is a way as such to ‘flex’ / show off his biceps and triceps.
  6. The font is in bold which can come across as stronger and more masculine.
  7. Suggests to the target audience that if they read the magazine they can look like Vin Diesel
This image has an empty alt attribute; its file name is mens-health-contents-page.jpg
  1. Dominant signifier of Vin Diesel, however is significantly smaller than the front cover
  2. Semantic pattern of physical power and strength
  3. Repertoire of elements (men)
  4. Shows a reactionary representation of exercise and fitness through links to articles. Shown through signifiers such as pictures of trainers and weights. This could be suggested to be creating an unrealistic view that to be considered a ‘real’ man you must be physically at top performance.
  5. Radical representation through the use of men of different ages and races
  6. Constructed identity (David Gauntlett)
This image has an empty alt attribute; its file name is mens-health-article.jpg

Mens health magazine had an average monthly reach of around 1.8 mil individuals in the united kingdom from April 2019- March 2020. Reach was lower with households with children and women. Paid subscriptions were a lot higher then paid single copies with a difference of 44,557.

CSP- Mens health magazine

  • Constructed reality (of what men should look like)
  • Centred around the man
  • Dominant colour blue as blue is often linked to boys “boy colour” – reactionary, stereotype
  • Surrounded by bold, idealistic quotes
  • very subtle features/elements such as barcode, price, date
  • The anchor is large and dominant with a small design feature of vin diesels head being brought on top
  • using the actor vin diesel represents gender stereotype of men

FOFO Task

  • Owned by Hearst, american business information conglomerate, owns multiple magazines.
  • Hearsst owns half of a&e cable network

  • William R. Hearst III now chairs Hearst Corp., which owns more than 360 businesses.
  • ownership of weekly newspapers including the Houston Chronicle, San Francisco Chronicle, San Antonio Express-News and Albany Times Union; more than 200 magazines
  • Men’s Health magazine had an average monthly reach of around 1.8 million individuals in the United Kingdom from April 2019 to March 2020
  • At one point between 1920 to 1930 Hearst was the biggest media conglomerate in the world
  • The magazine was acquired by the Bauer Media Australia, which purchased Pacific Magazines in May 2020. In July 2020, publication of the magazine ceased.
  • Hearst also owns siter magazine Women’s Health