Introduction to Political Economy of Media Media & Society Media Economics Monika Metykova m.metykova@sussex.ac.uk 32153@mail.muni.cz VARIOUS APPROACHES AND RESEARCH TRADITIONS – NORMATIVE THEORIES OF THE PRESS lOriginally developed by Siebert et al. in 1956: 1. authoritarian (not do anything that would disturb established authority, media always subordinate to such authority) 2. free press (free from censorship, attack on gvt, party etc. should not be punishable, no restrictions on the collection and publication of info) 3. social responsibility (media should accept and fulfil certain obligations to the society; high professional standards – truth, accuracy, objectivity, balance) 4. Soviet media theory (media should serve the interest of and be owned by the working class, no private ownership, positive roles in the society) lMcQuail (1983) adds two: 5. development media theory (media should accept and carry out positive tasks in line with nationally established policy freedom of media can be restricted due to (1) economic priorities and (2) development needs of society) 6. democratic-participant media theory (individs and minority groups have rights of access to media and rights to be served by the media; small scale, participative, interactive media) Hallin and Mancini: Comparing Media Systems: Three Models of Media and Politics (2004) - One aspect is professionalization of journalism Òthe North/Central European or democratic corporatist model Òthe Mediterranean or polarized pluralist model Òand the North Atlantic or liberal model Anglo-American/liberal model of journalism seems to dominate (characterized by detachment, objectivity) Southern European pathway: France and Italy – mix news and views and prioritize opinion over reportage Germany, Scandinavia, BeNeLux – corporatist model – diminishing political parallelism, legacy of commentary-based approach and increasing emphasis on neutral/detached reporting Frank Esser and Andrea Umbricht : Competing Models of Journalism? Political Affairs Coverage in U.S., British, German, Swiss, French and Italian Newspapers http://www.nccr-democracy.uzh.ch/publications/workingpaper/pdf/wp_55.pdf James Curran's narratives of media history lUK based, looks at the: “media's constitutional elevation is usually described in terms of two intertwined narrative themes. The first recounts how the press became free of government control by the mid-nineteenth century, followed by the liberation of film and broadcasting in the mid-twentieth century. The second theme is concerned with how the liberated media empowered the people.” UK Curran continued lChallenges to the established narrative: lFeminist – media remained under male controlled lRadical – the media didn't remain free, they were re-integrated within dominant power structures lPopulist – a challenge to elitist culture, however, theose exploring the rise fo entertainment do not look at its impact on the democratic roles of the media lNation building Media/Cultural Industries lIndustrial production and circulation of texts (not restricted to written texts) lDavid Hesmondhalgh: The Cultural Industries: lCore cultural industries: broadcasting; film industries; content aspects of the Internet industry; music industries; print and electronic publishing; video and computer games; advertising and marketing lThese interact/interconnect with each other in complex ways, mainly because they compete for the same resources: disposable consumer income; advertising revenue; consumption time; creative and technical labour Why study media/cultural industries? 1.Make and circulate texts that influence our understanding of the world (the effect is complex) 2.Manage and circulate creativity (are ‘symbol creators’ (Hesmondhalgh’s term) different? Geniuses? Responding to a higher calling? Or is it similar to other kinds of labour?) 3.Agents of economic, social and cultural change (and the contents/texts are a good indicator of this) etc. Examples: 1950s US sitcom I Love Lucy and 1990s Friends http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gLdf8WwkMWw http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_H1abeHYxTM&feature=related BBC children programmes: Blue Peter 1967 episode http://www.bbc.co.uk/archive/bigben/7505.shtml 1993 episode http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=auiP1YdelEo Other reasons? —McQuail: 1.Activities of media are economic and political (political function of media in a democracy + information and ideas cannot acceptably be monopolized by private individuals – a public good) 2.As well as dependent on changing technologies of distribution 3.Alternatively: internal – media professional – point of view Public good vs. commercial enterprise lEmergence of radio l1922 British Broadcasting Corporation Ltd. founded l5 March 1926: Parliamentary Crawford Committee published its broadcasting report; termination of the British Broadcasting Company, Ltd. and creation of a Crown chartered, non-commercial British Broadcasting Corporation from 1927 lFunded by a licence fee (compulsory radio licence until 1971), public good lpublic service broadcasting;1st general manager John Reith: educate, inform and entertain lvs. the United States – funding from advertising (soap opera – dramatic serials on radio sponsored by soap manufacturers: Procter&Gamble, Colgate-Palmolive, Lever Brothers) Media economics —Media/cultural products have special characteristics: 1.Hybrid/mixed in terms of markets, product and technology (operate in a dual market, selling a product to consumers and a service/audience to advertisers; diversified products and technologies and organizational means for distribution) 2.High labour intensiveness and high fixed costs (although changing with new technologies and media expansion) 3.High degree of uncertainty (in terms of consumer evaluation – still difficult to predict audience tastes) and uniqueness of the product 4.Despite standardization media products can rarely be repeatedly sold in the same form 5.Media especially prone to concentration 6.Many media businesses are hard to enter without large capital resources 7.Media are affected by the public interest News - a special kind of commodity lNews – a double commodity lAdvertisers and consumers are the news organization’s customers lAdvertisers compete for public attention l McManus: What Kind of Commodity Is News? Communication Research 19(6), 1992. Foreign news – expensive to produce lsteady decrease in foreign news coverage lthe decline of the foreign correspondent •http://www.ted.com/talks/alisa_miller_shares_the_news_about_the_news?language=en Media Standards Trust study 2010 Shrinking World lCoverage of foreign news in UK print l4 daily newspapers: lDaily Mirror lDaily Mail lGuardian lTelegraph Available at: http://mediastandardstrust.org/wp-content/uploads/downloads/2010/11/Shrinking-World-FINAL-VERSION.p df Production, distribution and consumption of news is material lA recent New York Times article opened with: lRussian Ships Near Data Cables Are Too Close for U.S. Comfort lWASHINGTON — Russian submarines and spy ships are aggressively operating near the vital undersea cables that carry almost all global Internet communications, raising concerns among some American military and intelligence officials that the Russians might be planning to attack those lines in times of tension or conflict. lThe issue goes beyond old worries during the Cold War that the Russians would tap into the cables — a task American intelligence agencies also mastered decades ago. The alarm today is deeper: The ultimate Russian hack on the United States could involve severing the fiber-optic cables at some of their hardest-to-access locations to halt the instant communications on which the West’s governments, economies and citizens have grown dependent. l(25 October 2015)