Pearson Education, Inc., Longman © 2008
The Mass Media and the The Mass Media and the Political AgendaPolitical Agenda
Chapter 7
Government in America: People, Politics, and PolicyThirteenth AP* Edition
Edwards/Wattenberg/Lineberry
Pearson Education, Inc., Longman © 2008
IntroductionIntroduction
Mass Media:– Television, radio, newspapers, magazines, the
Internet and other means of popular communication
High-Tech Politics:– A politics in which the behavior of citizens and
policymakers and the political agenda itself are increasingly shaped by technology
Think: Egypt
Pearson Education, Inc., Longman © 2008
The Mass Media TodayThe Mass Media Today
Effective communication through media is key to political success.– Media Events: events purposely staged for the media
that are meant to look spontaneous – 60% of presidential campaign spending is on TV ads
Two-thirds is negative.
– Image making and news management is important, especially for presidents.
Walter Mondale- If a president had to give up either the veto or the press conference, he’d be smarter to give up the veto.
Pearson Education, Inc., Longman © 2008
The Development of Media The Development of Media PoliticsPolitics
The History of the NewsHamilton/Jefferson- newspapers were the “mouthpiece” of the political
parties (Lapdog)
Financial Independence- Age of Jackson and the “penny press”- papers sold advertising so they became independent of political sponsorship (Watchdog)
Finding their purpose- turn of the century saw the rise of “yellow journalism” where the news was dictated and fabricated by editors seeking to sell papers. Reporters didn’t like this because they had no professional credibility. The age of investigatory and objective journalism began with the muckrackers.
Today’s journalists have crossed the line from being investigatory and objective, to being intrusive, invasive and subjective (Junkyard dog)
Pearson Education, Inc., Longman © 2008
The Development of Media The Development of Media PoliticsPolitics
Government Regulation of the Broadcast Media– The Federal Communications Commission
(FCC) regulates the use of airwaves in three ways:
Prevent near monopoly control of market Reviews performance of stations Issues fair treatment rules for politicians
Pearson Education, Inc., Longman © 2008
The Development of Media The Development of Media PoliticsPolitics
From Broadcasting to Narrowcasting: The Rise of Cable News Channels– Narrowcasting: media programming on cable TV or
Internet that is focused on one topic and aimed at a particular audience, e.g., C-SPAN
– Potential of cable and the internet to report on news as it happens plus the many choices they offer has created a “competition” among news sources for users.
– Newspapers have seen the most detrimental effect of the rise of cable TV
– There is a focus on “if it bleeds, it leads.”
Pearson Education, Inc., Longman © 2008
The Development of Media The Development of Media PoliticsPolitics
The Impact of the Internet– Potential to inform Americans about politics– Since Americans are generally disinterested in
politics, they will not necessarily use the Internet for political information.
– Blogs provide additional information about news stories. The problem with these, is people view them as “news” i.e. if it’s on the internet it must be true.
Pearson Education, Inc., Longman © 2008
The Development of Media The Development of Media PoliticsPolitics
Private Control of the Media– Only a small number of TV/Radio stations are publicly owned in
America. Including Mrs. Ries’ favorite- National Public Radio (91.5 on your fm dial)
– Independent in what they can report, most media are totally dependent on advertising revenues.
– Publicly owned media are funded entirely through viewer/listener contributions.
– Chains: massive media conglomerates that account for over four-fifths of the nation’s daily newspaper circulation
The Big Chains are Gannett, Knight-Ridder Corporate conglomerates control the broadcast media. For example,
GE owns NBC, Disney owns ABC, etc…
Pearson Education, Inc., Longman © 2008
Reporting the NewsReporting the News
Finding the News- Investigatory Journalism– Beats: specific locations from which news frequently
emanates, such as Congress or the White House– Trial Balloons: an intentional news leak for the purpose
of assessing the political reaction– Reporters and their sources depend on each other; one
for stories, the other to get them out. There have been recent controversies involving whether or not
reporters should be “shielded” from having to reveal their sources when information about illegal activities is revealed.
Pearson Education, Inc., Longman © 2008
Reporting the NewsReporting the News
Pearson Education, Inc., Longman © 2008
Reporting the NewsReporting the News Presenting the News
– Superficial describes most news coverage today. The news tends to focus on “image over issues,” and “style over substance.”
– Sound Bites: short video clips of approximately 10 seconds– Major TV networks devote less time to covering the policy stances
political candidates and more time to photo ops, sound bites and personal information.
Pearson Education, Inc., Longman © 2008
Reporting the NewsReporting the News
The Role of the Media in Campaigns– Media play the most prominent role in the early stages
of the campaign as the candidates seek to create an image. What goes on in these early stages can make or break a candidate (i.e. Howard Dean and the “Dean Scream.” )
– As the campaign goes on, the media’s coverage tends to focus on the “horse race.” This means they focus on whose ahead/behind in the polls, as opposed to substantive policy debates.
Pearson Education, Inc., Longman © 2008
Reporting the NewsReporting the News Bias in the News
– Many people believe the news is biased in favor of one point of view.– News reporting is biased towards what will draw the largest audience;
good pictures and negative reporting– Most reporters will admit to having a liberal bias, but most editors will
admit to having a conservative bias. – Bias in the news is very often detected based on the individual’s selective
perception. If you are conservative, you may not detect that Fox News is conservative, or
conversely, if you are liberal, you may not think the NY Times is overtly liberal.
Today, biased news media has become part of the profit game as well as the political process, where the pundits and talking heads try to carve out a niche by creating “personalities” that rail against various issues.
Pearson Education, Inc., Longman © 2008
Reporting the NewsReporting the News
Pearson Education, Inc., Longman © 2008
The News and Public OpinionThe News and Public Opinion
Television news can affect what people think is important. Agenda-setting effect
The media influence the criteria by which the public evaluates political leaders. Gate-keeper effect
The media influences HOW the public perceives the news. The Issue-Framing effect
Pearson Education, Inc., Longman © 2008
The Media’s Agenda-Setting The Media’s Agenda-Setting FunctionFunction
Policy Agenda: the issues that attract the serious attention of public officials and other people actively involved in politics at the time
Policy Entrepreneurs: people who invest their political “capital” in an issue to get it placed high on governmental agenda– Use media to raise awareness of issue
Pearson Education, Inc., Longman © 2008
Understanding the Mass Understanding the Mass MediaMedia
The Media and the Scope of Government– Media as a 4th Branch of Government acts as a check on
the two policymaking branches of government– New proposals are often met with skepticism and can
lead to highly charged debates among the “media elite” which then filters down to the public.
Many would say that the role of the media is to approach government with a “healthy skepticism” but we have reached the point where it is actually a “corrosive cynicism.”
– On the other hand, if the media identify a problem, they often demand “immediate” governmental response, and when they don’t get it, it leads to even more cynicism and negative coverage.
Pearson Education, Inc., Longman © 2008
Understanding the Mass Understanding the Mass MediaMedia
Presidents and the Media– Candidates win by appealing to people on television– The media have replaced the role that political parties used to play
in screening and “presenting” candidates– After Nixon’s defeat in 1960, largely because of his appearance in
the televised debate with Kennedy, he was the first to recognize the need for a professional media consultants in presidential campaigns.
– The President actually gets the most positive media coverage because as one person, he can cultivate a relationship with his White House Press Corps. Something Congress and the Courts cannot do.
White House Press Corps must remain careful, so as not to become too “cozy” with the President and fail to challenge him when given the chance. If they do become too “soft” this is often referred to as “drinking the kool-aid.
Pearson Education, Inc., Longman © 2008
SummarySummary
Media shape public opinion on political issues and influence policy agenda through agenda-setting and issue-framing
Media shape elections by acting as gate-keepers and by their coverage of the “horse race.”
Broadcast media have replaced print media over time. Narrowcasting and the Internet are further shifting media. Seeking profits, media are biased in favor of stories with
high drama. There is a new focus on “infotainment.”