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Unit III Mass Media, Political Parties and Interest Groups pp. 210-222 – Mass Media.

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Presentation on theme: "Unit III Mass Media, Political Parties and Interest Groups pp. 210-222 – Mass Media."— Presentation transcript:

1 Unit III Mass Media, Political Parties and Interest Groups pp. 210-222 – Mass Media

2 High Tech Politics A politics in which the behavior of citizens and policymakers, as well as the political agenda itself are increasingly shaped by technology. Mass Media – key part of this technology (radio, television, newspapers, internet and magazines) esp. now with cell phones featuring apps

3 Media Event Staged purposely so that the media will cover it! Can include “photo opts” and special coverage events Candidates going door to door, candidates kissing babies, etc.

4 Development of Media Politics FDR (1933-1945) – media was seen as a potential ally. FDR promised reporters two press conferences a week resulting in about 1,000 press conferences during his 12 years in the White House. “Fireside Chats” to the Depression-ridden nation 1960s brought about an entirely different type of media attention – cynicism

5 Investigative Journalism The use of detective-like reporting methods to unearth scandals ▫Watergate ▫Lewinsky

6 Print and Broadcast Media Print Media – includes newspapers and magazines Broadcast Media – includes radio, television and the internet

7 The Print Media 1 st American daily newspaper – Philadelphia 1783 Advancements of the printing press Pecking order ▫The New Your Times ▫The Washington Post

8 The Broadcast Media 1930s-1950s – radio coverage of news, music and on-air shows caught America’s attention 1950s-1960s – emergence of television Vietnam – first time the horrors of war were seen on tv Growth of cable brought about multi-media networks including ▫CNN ▫Fox News ▫MSNBC ▫C-SPAN

9 Government Regulation of the Broadcast Media FCC – Federal Communications Commission 1934 – Congress created the FCC to regulate the airwaves Today the FCC regulates radio, telephone, television, cable and satellite Regulates in 3 ways: ▫Prevent near monopolies ▫Conducts periodic examinations to make sure the public interest is being served ▫Fair treatment rules for the airwaves

10 Narrowcasting Focus on a narrow audience rather than a general audience (broadcasting) ▫MTV/VH1 ▫C-SPAN/MSNBC/CNN/Fox News ▫ESPN ▫HGTV

11 Private Control of the Media Privatization of networks – ABC, NBC, CBS Europe – BBC Chains – Major metropolitan newspapers are mostly owned by chains Today’s massive media conglomerates control newspapers with over 80% of the nation’s daily circulation.


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