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SOME MISCELLANEOUS MEDIA NOTES
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MEDIA LITERACY - KEY CONCEPTS
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| Difference between -->> | EDUCATION | PROPAGANDA |
| Controversial nature of topic | recognized | disguised |
| Stance | objective | emotional |
| Facts/evidence used | relevant | irrelevant |
| Sources | identified, verified | hidden, disguised, falsified |
| Motives | revealed | hidden |
| Tricks of trade | avoided | used |
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PROPAGANDA MODEL
Source: The Propaganda Model: The myth of the liberal media video, Noam Chomsky, Edward Herman, Media Education Foundation, 1997
1. Ownership filter (News owners): media concentration either by large multinational corporations, e.g. CBS Westinghouse, ABC Disney, NBC GE, or sole proprietors, e.g. Newscorp Rupert Murdoch (Aussie) and Conrad Black (Canuck), Cable TV stations owned by Time Warner, Viacom, Disney and Newscorp.
2. Advertising filter:
radio and television 100% ads,
newsprint 80%,
magazines 50%
Idea of corporate censorship, public broadcasting effects
3. Sourcing filter:
Newsmakers: newsworthy people/institutions, i.e. politicians/government and its PR officials, military officials, celebrities
Newshapers: news presenters/sources:
a) editorials - opinions expressed in editorial pages;
b) journalists cannot have opinions so choose experts who will say what they want to hear, i.e. economic or foreign policy think tanks, e.g. Centre for International Studies at Georgetown, American Enterprise Institute, Cato Institute, Heritage Foundation (Heritage Front) or professors;
c) news service companies e.g. Reuters, Associated Press, Canadian University Press
4. Flak filter: negative feedback, pressure from groups on media. Media monitoring groups include
a) government
b) corporations
c) special interest groups, e.g. Accuracy in Media (AIM), MediaWatch
5. Workers at media outlets:
a) those we see/hear: anchors, journalists, announcers;
b) those we dont see: station managers, tech people, researchers, writers
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