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Effects and
 Audiences




         1
The Imagined Reader

         Breakfast cereal
                Car
        Holiday destination
             Fast food
             Furniture
             TV show
              Music
                Pet
Audience Research
► Producing data from research
► Providing empirical evidence of audience
  behaviour or discursive evidence of
  audience responses.
► Done commercially by media producers and
  distributors – ratings, market research
► Done critically by media academics
Audience Theories
► Creating new ideas / new ways of thinking about
  media audiences.
► Audience research used to test out audience
  theories.
► Effects.
► Uses and gratifications.
► Reception theory.
► Ethnography.
► Postmodern theory.
► Media 2.0
Spectrum of
                           behaviourism



Direct                                               Theories
Effects                                              of Active
theory                                               Audiences
Media stimulus is                           Audiences use media
followed by                                 to satisfy particular
straightforward                             needs and to enable
audience                                    the flow of
response            “Effects debate” very   communications from
                    much alive –            person to person
See Lasswell
and the             mass media and
effectiveness of    social panics
propaganda
Media Effects ?
        (Behaviourism theories)
► Benevolent? (education, Publicity,
 entertainment…)

► Malign? (eg propaganda, hegemony)


► Criticism: no study has conclusively
 identified or rejected the possibility of media
 effects
Early Models and Research

► The Hypodermic Syringe Model
► The Two-step Flow Hypothesis
► Experiments
► Claims




                                 8
Hypodermic Model
► ‘Effects’theory is / was often limited to the
  idea that the media ‘inject’ messages into
  audiences who are seen as passive.

► The  constant attempt to ‘prove’ that media
  violence creates violent citizens (eg horror
  films, video nasties in the 1980s, videogames
  now) is based on this false premise.

► Effects   and ‘moral panics’.
► Violence   and sex in media 'damaging
  children'
http://www.youtube.com/watch?
  v=B5QVaX32OdI&feature=fvw
► 'Video Games Promote Racism, Sexism
  and Hatred' - The Alan Titchmarsh Show
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5_9nj-Xngpc
► Beyond Good & Evil: Children, Media &
  Violent Times
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CggjBd7o-
  PM&feature=related
11
Questions
►  How far do we agree that the media affect
  us?
► What kind of forms do these effects take?
► Is it possible to measure these effects? How
  would you do it?
► What kind of variables or approaches need
  to be taken into consideration to explore
  audience research fully?
Fredic Wertham’s
   Seduction of the Innocent (1955)
► Two targets of his vitriolic attacks:
     Crime comics
     Television
► 5 psychological problems identified:
     Passivity
     Misconception
     Imitation
     Identification
     Desensitization
Fredic Wertham’s Seduction of the Innocent (1955)

► Tests with children but unreliability of these
    artificial tests eg. The Duess Test –
    encourage research subjects to provide
    responses that researcher is expecting
►   [Also see the Bobo doll experiment]
► These views :
     overstate media effects
     Understate capacity of children to distinguish
      fantasy from reality
     Have captured the public mood ever since!
     Have spurned many similar studies
Wertham’s spirit lives on…
► Popular support and publicity, particularly during
  heightened incidents of violent crime in the real
  world.

► Research: Explore other criticism of Wertham’s
  theories, for eg his focus on cases of juvenile
  delinquency and his lack of focus on socio-
  economic conditions to explain these unwanted
  behaviours
► Media as scapegoat for the ills of society?
http://www.mediawatchuk.org.uk/
Effects research
► Starts from a premise based in morals
► Central question:
   “how much harm is done to vulnerable viewers
    by improper media materials?”


► (see Gauntlett’s “10 things wrong with the
 effects model” for critique)


                                              17
Problems
► Assumes media affects behaviour, but this
  needs to be argued and evidenced.
   Distinctive message - can we assume there is ‘a
    (singular) reading’? Conceives audience as
    passive



► Proof of media effects lies in advertising…
   Why would people pay for advertising if it had no
    EFFECT?

                                                        18
What is Violence?
► What is “media violence”?  Rank the following in
  terms of the most to the least violent:
     Itchy and Scratchy
     Saving Private Ryan
     The Sopranos
     Sin City
     Rambo
     News (fighting in Iraq)
     Boxing
     WWE wrestling
     Modern Warfare 2
                                                 19
Define

► The point is are we even talking about comparable
  features, let alone are they the same? 
► Because “media violence” exists only in the
  context of narrative, characters, genres, etc. It is
  simply a term that is impossible to define.




                                                    20
•   The common sense argument is based on the
    need to protect children.
•   Difficult to question as within our society
    children are regarded as vulnerable, ignorant
    and irrational
•   BUT Buckingham (1996) observes that
    children become extremely sophisticated in
    reading media texts from an early age.  Many
    children are frightened by horror but this is
    also true of the news.  The ability to develop
    coping strategies for fiction but not for factual
    programmes shows the sophistication of
    children in reading texts.
•   See also Hodge and Tripp (1986)
                                                    21
Moral Panics and Media Effects
►   “It is now perhaps more interesting not to ask what
    the effects of television are, but rather why there is so
    much concern about the question” (Gauntlett)

►   Moral Panic – “a condition, episode, person or
    group of persons emerges as a threat to societal
    values and interests: its nature is presented in a
    stylised and stereotypical fashion by the mass media:
    the moral barricades are manned by editors, bishops,
    politicians and other right thinking people; socially
    accredited experts pronounce their diagnoses and
    solutions; ways of coping are evolved or (more often)
    resorted to.” (Cohen 1972, p.9)
                                                           22
Historical Perspective

► Music halls in Victorian Britain – lawlessness and
  immorality
► Football, 100 years ago – hooliganism
► Bicycles, 1890s – cause of chaos and terror
► Rock and roll, 1950s – “the Negro’s revenge”
► Video Nasties, 1980s – “ban this sick filth”
► Video Games, 1990s-now
► Internet (IM, SNS), 2000s - now


                                                  23
Cultivation theory
      George Gerber et al. 1986)

► Seeks to measure the long term effects of tv’s
  contributions to our conceptions of social
  reality
► Tv (and other media) is too omnipresent for
  viewers to escape its “gradual encroachment”
  into our everyday lives.
► Continued exposure to tv messages is likely
  to “reiterate, confirm and nourish” their values
  and perspectives (mainstreaming effect)
Cultivation theory
              (George Gerber et al. 1986)

► Heavy tv viewers think differently to light viewers
  about the world around them

► “Mean World Syndrome”
► Eg. “Crime in prime time is at least 10 times as
  rampant as in the real world”

► Concept of mainstreaming – appeal to broad audience
  interest  homogenization of divergent views
    Gerber fears that tv broadcasting excludes diverse opinions
     (too much consensus – limited choice of ‘reasonable options’
     represented)
Cultivation theory
          (George Gerber et al. 1986)
Involves 3 Types of analysis;
► Institutional process analysis;
Eg. the production and distribution of a televised
  sporting event can be analysed in respect of how
  decisions are made and power exercised.
► Message system analysis, ie extensive content
  analysis of media productions, such as children’ tv
► Cultivation analysis = surveys of people’s opinions
  on certain subjects after tv viewing. Measures the
  differential in conceptions of “the outside world”
  between light and heavy viewers.
Cultivation theory
              (George Gerber et al. 1986)


►    “TV provides a guide and offers ‘tv answers’
    to the question of how to act and behave in
    the outside world.”

    (including promotion of capitalist views in the
      western world)
Agenda setting and social functions of media
             (see McCombs and Shaw, 1972)
                similar to cultivation theory


► Concerned with how public opinion is
  shaped by media
► Again, looking at long term effects


► Media agenda (patterns of news coverage)
  Public agenda (concerns of the public)
Implication – mass media create passive and drowsy
audience
McCombs and Gilbert, 1986
► Extensive content analysis to show that      “Through
    their routine structuring of social and political
    reality, the news media influence the agenda of
    public issues around which political campaigns and
    voter decisions are organized”

► Salience given to certain news item by journalists


► Stories selected in accordance with certain   news
    values

►   See Hasina’s Presentation
Giving salience to certain news items:

► Frequency of repetition              (rolling news story)


► Prominence with which items are displayed
  (headline, salience of media images over issues for readers/viewers
  etc.)


► Degree of conflict (political scandals > newsworthy than
  consensus)


► Framing of news item (in what context / when it appears
  eg. summer holiday weekend = news about excessive teenage
  drinking)
John Pilger’s The War You don’t See
►   http://g325crit.blogspot.com/
Ownership and Media
            Power
►A  Marxist view of media will focus on the
 relationship between the providers of media,
 broader power structures and the messages
 in media products circulated by these
 power-holding institutions.
 This is media hegemony / ideology theory.

► Outfoxed    is a key example.
 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2IwIRNM5noY
Outfoxed
 What    does Outfoxed reveal?

 Is   this a shock?

 Power    and influence

 Democracy     and representation

 Who    owns your media?

 How    are you influenced?
Two Step Flow Model

Katz and Lazarsfeld,
1955
McQuail and Windahl,
1986

The   stars are ‘opinion leaders’
The   circles are everyone else
Two step flow
► Hasina’s presentation


► Study of how people influence the flow of
 mass media messages

► FIRST MAJOR REBUTTAL TO THEORIES
 OF MEDIA EFFECTS
► Katz and Lazarsfeld compare the role of opinion
  leaders to the role of media in influencing
  individuals’ decision-making processes.

► Opinion leaders from all occupational groups, all
  socio-economic backgrounds

► Ideas can flow from the media source
             To opinion leaders
                           And from them to the less active
Very relevant today with   sections of the population
new and social media!
Joseph Kappler’s
       Phenomenistic approach
            (same line as 2 step flow)


► Focuses on how audiences respond to
 media messages in a wider context

► Looks at how media generates a stimulus to
 which audiences might respond BUT asserts
 that mass media cannot be seen in isolation
 from all other influences that cause human
 behaviour to change, or their attitudes or
 actions
Kappler’s conclusions
► Media in most cases do not cause effects
 on their audiences

► Instead they function as one component
 along a spectrum of factors which are “more
 likely to reinforce than to change” people’s
 behaviour and attitudes.
Kappler’s conclusions
5 main mediating factors:

1.   An individual’s predisposed opinions and how these tend to
     mean they use media in selective ways
2.   The group to which the individual belongs and how the
     predispositions of the group impact on the individual’s
     opinions
3.   Interpersonal dissemination of media content (ie like-
     minded people)
4.   Opinion Leadership (similar to 2 step flow): OL use media
     messages to reinforce their predisposed opinions rather
     than simply relay what these messages have to say
5.   Role of mass media in a free enterprise society
     (prerequisite to please both advertisers and audiences 
     institutions tend to produce content based on successful
     formulas rather than try out more innovative content and
     run risk of displeasing stakeholders)
Uses and Gratifications
Blumer and Katz, 1974
We USE media (active, not passive) for:

► Diversion
► Personal Relationships
► Personal Identity
► Surveillance
Blumer and Katz, 1974
► Find out what they argue in their study
  (eg, need precedes the effect)

► Find out in what ways this line of thinking has
  been created, particularly in today’s media-
  saturated society.
► Eg some say that this theory smacks of a mere
  defence of media institutions’ oldest argument, ie.
  “we only give the people what they want”
Conclusion

► Vested interests in appropriating blame at the
  doorstep of the media
► Most frequent concern is new media/cultural
  behaviour and practices
► All media content is not the same or even for
  everyone
► Simplistic cause and effect claims are problematic



                                                   46
Spectrum of
                       behaviourism



Direct                                            Theories
Effects                                           of Active
theory                                            Audiences
Media stimulus is                        Audiences use media
followed by                              to satisfy particular
straightforward                          needs and to enable
audience                                 the flow of
response                                 communications from
                                         person to person
See Lasswell
and the             Can you fit in all the
effectiveness of    theories we have seen
propaganda          along that spectrum?
4 Research Groups
►   Conduct your research using the relevant slides and finding
    more sources (which you will list), including at least 1 or 2
    videos from YouTube or Vimeo or… Find at least one real
    example from the media to apply your theory to.

►   Prepare to PRESENT and TEACH your findings to the rest
    of the group (PPT or Prezi) – aim for 5 to 10 minutes.
►   Topics to choose from – 1 per ‘group’:
       Cultivation Theory
       Joseph Kappler’s Phenomenistic approach
       Uses and gratifications - Blumer and Katz, 1974
       Uses and gratifications – criticism of the theory
http://www.peersunited.com/media-influenc

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Effects and audiences lesson 2

  • 2. The Imagined Reader Breakfast cereal Car Holiday destination Fast food Furniture TV show Music Pet
  • 3. Audience Research ► Producing data from research ► Providing empirical evidence of audience behaviour or discursive evidence of audience responses. ► Done commercially by media producers and distributors – ratings, market research ► Done critically by media academics
  • 4. Audience Theories ► Creating new ideas / new ways of thinking about media audiences. ► Audience research used to test out audience theories. ► Effects. ► Uses and gratifications. ► Reception theory. ► Ethnography. ► Postmodern theory. ► Media 2.0
  • 5. Spectrum of behaviourism Direct Theories Effects of Active theory Audiences Media stimulus is Audiences use media followed by to satisfy particular straightforward needs and to enable audience the flow of response “Effects debate” very communications from much alive – person to person See Lasswell and the mass media and effectiveness of social panics propaganda
  • 6. Media Effects ? (Behaviourism theories) ► Benevolent? (education, Publicity, entertainment…) ► Malign? (eg propaganda, hegemony) ► Criticism: no study has conclusively identified or rejected the possibility of media effects
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  • 8. Early Models and Research ► The Hypodermic Syringe Model ► The Two-step Flow Hypothesis ► Experiments ► Claims 8
  • 9. Hypodermic Model ► ‘Effects’theory is / was often limited to the idea that the media ‘inject’ messages into audiences who are seen as passive. ► The constant attempt to ‘prove’ that media violence creates violent citizens (eg horror films, video nasties in the 1980s, videogames now) is based on this false premise. ► Effects and ‘moral panics’.
  • 10. ► Violence and sex in media 'damaging children' http://www.youtube.com/watch? v=B5QVaX32OdI&feature=fvw ► 'Video Games Promote Racism, Sexism and Hatred' - The Alan Titchmarsh Show http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5_9nj-Xngpc ► Beyond Good & Evil: Children, Media & Violent Times http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CggjBd7o- PM&feature=related
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  • 12. Questions ► How far do we agree that the media affect us? ► What kind of forms do these effects take? ► Is it possible to measure these effects? How would you do it? ► What kind of variables or approaches need to be taken into consideration to explore audience research fully?
  • 13. Fredic Wertham’s Seduction of the Innocent (1955) ► Two targets of his vitriolic attacks:  Crime comics  Television ► 5 psychological problems identified:  Passivity  Misconception  Imitation  Identification  Desensitization
  • 14. Fredic Wertham’s Seduction of the Innocent (1955) ► Tests with children but unreliability of these artificial tests eg. The Duess Test – encourage research subjects to provide responses that researcher is expecting ► [Also see the Bobo doll experiment] ► These views :  overstate media effects  Understate capacity of children to distinguish fantasy from reality  Have captured the public mood ever since!  Have spurned many similar studies
  • 15. Wertham’s spirit lives on… ► Popular support and publicity, particularly during heightened incidents of violent crime in the real world. ► Research: Explore other criticism of Wertham’s theories, for eg his focus on cases of juvenile delinquency and his lack of focus on socio- economic conditions to explain these unwanted behaviours ► Media as scapegoat for the ills of society?
  • 17. Effects research ► Starts from a premise based in morals ► Central question:  “how much harm is done to vulnerable viewers by improper media materials?” ► (see Gauntlett’s “10 things wrong with the effects model” for critique) 17
  • 18. Problems ► Assumes media affects behaviour, but this needs to be argued and evidenced.  Distinctive message - can we assume there is ‘a (singular) reading’? Conceives audience as passive ► Proof of media effects lies in advertising…  Why would people pay for advertising if it had no EFFECT? 18
  • 19. What is Violence? ► What is “media violence”?  Rank the following in terms of the most to the least violent:  Itchy and Scratchy  Saving Private Ryan  The Sopranos  Sin City  Rambo  News (fighting in Iraq)  Boxing  WWE wrestling  Modern Warfare 2 19
  • 20. Define ► The point is are we even talking about comparable features, let alone are they the same?  ► Because “media violence” exists only in the context of narrative, characters, genres, etc. It is simply a term that is impossible to define. 20
  • 21. The common sense argument is based on the need to protect children. • Difficult to question as within our society children are regarded as vulnerable, ignorant and irrational • BUT Buckingham (1996) observes that children become extremely sophisticated in reading media texts from an early age.  Many children are frightened by horror but this is also true of the news.  The ability to develop coping strategies for fiction but not for factual programmes shows the sophistication of children in reading texts. • See also Hodge and Tripp (1986) 21
  • 22. Moral Panics and Media Effects ► “It is now perhaps more interesting not to ask what the effects of television are, but rather why there is so much concern about the question” (Gauntlett) ► Moral Panic – “a condition, episode, person or group of persons emerges as a threat to societal values and interests: its nature is presented in a stylised and stereotypical fashion by the mass media: the moral barricades are manned by editors, bishops, politicians and other right thinking people; socially accredited experts pronounce their diagnoses and solutions; ways of coping are evolved or (more often) resorted to.” (Cohen 1972, p.9) 22
  • 23. Historical Perspective ► Music halls in Victorian Britain – lawlessness and immorality ► Football, 100 years ago – hooliganism ► Bicycles, 1890s – cause of chaos and terror ► Rock and roll, 1950s – “the Negro’s revenge” ► Video Nasties, 1980s – “ban this sick filth” ► Video Games, 1990s-now ► Internet (IM, SNS), 2000s - now 23
  • 24. Cultivation theory George Gerber et al. 1986) ► Seeks to measure the long term effects of tv’s contributions to our conceptions of social reality ► Tv (and other media) is too omnipresent for viewers to escape its “gradual encroachment” into our everyday lives. ► Continued exposure to tv messages is likely to “reiterate, confirm and nourish” their values and perspectives (mainstreaming effect)
  • 25. Cultivation theory (George Gerber et al. 1986) ► Heavy tv viewers think differently to light viewers about the world around them ► “Mean World Syndrome” ► Eg. “Crime in prime time is at least 10 times as rampant as in the real world” ► Concept of mainstreaming – appeal to broad audience interest  homogenization of divergent views  Gerber fears that tv broadcasting excludes diverse opinions (too much consensus – limited choice of ‘reasonable options’ represented)
  • 26. Cultivation theory (George Gerber et al. 1986) Involves 3 Types of analysis; ► Institutional process analysis; Eg. the production and distribution of a televised sporting event can be analysed in respect of how decisions are made and power exercised. ► Message system analysis, ie extensive content analysis of media productions, such as children’ tv ► Cultivation analysis = surveys of people’s opinions on certain subjects after tv viewing. Measures the differential in conceptions of “the outside world” between light and heavy viewers.
  • 27. Cultivation theory (George Gerber et al. 1986) ► “TV provides a guide and offers ‘tv answers’ to the question of how to act and behave in the outside world.” (including promotion of capitalist views in the western world)
  • 28. Agenda setting and social functions of media (see McCombs and Shaw, 1972) similar to cultivation theory ► Concerned with how public opinion is shaped by media ► Again, looking at long term effects ► Media agenda (patterns of news coverage)  Public agenda (concerns of the public)
  • 29. Implication – mass media create passive and drowsy audience
  • 30. McCombs and Gilbert, 1986 ► Extensive content analysis to show that “Through their routine structuring of social and political reality, the news media influence the agenda of public issues around which political campaigns and voter decisions are organized” ► Salience given to certain news item by journalists ► Stories selected in accordance with certain news values ► See Hasina’s Presentation
  • 31. Giving salience to certain news items: ► Frequency of repetition (rolling news story) ► Prominence with which items are displayed (headline, salience of media images over issues for readers/viewers etc.) ► Degree of conflict (political scandals > newsworthy than consensus) ► Framing of news item (in what context / when it appears eg. summer holiday weekend = news about excessive teenage drinking)
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  • 33. John Pilger’s The War You don’t See ► http://g325crit.blogspot.com/
  • 34. Ownership and Media Power ►A Marxist view of media will focus on the relationship between the providers of media, broader power structures and the messages in media products circulated by these power-holding institutions. This is media hegemony / ideology theory. ► Outfoxed is a key example. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2IwIRNM5noY
  • 35. Outfoxed  What does Outfoxed reveal?  Is this a shock?  Power and influence  Democracy and representation  Who owns your media?  How are you influenced?
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  • 37. Two Step Flow Model Katz and Lazarsfeld, 1955 McQuail and Windahl, 1986 The stars are ‘opinion leaders’ The circles are everyone else
  • 38. Two step flow ► Hasina’s presentation ► Study of how people influence the flow of mass media messages ► FIRST MAJOR REBUTTAL TO THEORIES OF MEDIA EFFECTS
  • 39. ► Katz and Lazarsfeld compare the role of opinion leaders to the role of media in influencing individuals’ decision-making processes. ► Opinion leaders from all occupational groups, all socio-economic backgrounds ► Ideas can flow from the media source To opinion leaders And from them to the less active Very relevant today with sections of the population new and social media!
  • 40. Joseph Kappler’s Phenomenistic approach (same line as 2 step flow) ► Focuses on how audiences respond to media messages in a wider context ► Looks at how media generates a stimulus to which audiences might respond BUT asserts that mass media cannot be seen in isolation from all other influences that cause human behaviour to change, or their attitudes or actions
  • 41. Kappler’s conclusions ► Media in most cases do not cause effects on their audiences ► Instead they function as one component along a spectrum of factors which are “more likely to reinforce than to change” people’s behaviour and attitudes.
  • 42. Kappler’s conclusions 5 main mediating factors: 1. An individual’s predisposed opinions and how these tend to mean they use media in selective ways 2. The group to which the individual belongs and how the predispositions of the group impact on the individual’s opinions 3. Interpersonal dissemination of media content (ie like- minded people) 4. Opinion Leadership (similar to 2 step flow): OL use media messages to reinforce their predisposed opinions rather than simply relay what these messages have to say 5. Role of mass media in a free enterprise society (prerequisite to please both advertisers and audiences  institutions tend to produce content based on successful formulas rather than try out more innovative content and run risk of displeasing stakeholders)
  • 43. Uses and Gratifications Blumer and Katz, 1974 We USE media (active, not passive) for: ► Diversion ► Personal Relationships ► Personal Identity ► Surveillance
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  • 45. Blumer and Katz, 1974 ► Find out what they argue in their study (eg, need precedes the effect) ► Find out in what ways this line of thinking has been created, particularly in today’s media- saturated society. ► Eg some say that this theory smacks of a mere defence of media institutions’ oldest argument, ie. “we only give the people what they want”
  • 46. Conclusion ► Vested interests in appropriating blame at the doorstep of the media ► Most frequent concern is new media/cultural behaviour and practices ► All media content is not the same or even for everyone ► Simplistic cause and effect claims are problematic 46
  • 47. Spectrum of behaviourism Direct Theories Effects of Active theory Audiences Media stimulus is Audiences use media followed by to satisfy particular straightforward needs and to enable audience the flow of response communications from person to person See Lasswell and the Can you fit in all the effectiveness of theories we have seen propaganda along that spectrum?
  • 48. 4 Research Groups ► Conduct your research using the relevant slides and finding more sources (which you will list), including at least 1 or 2 videos from YouTube or Vimeo or… Find at least one real example from the media to apply your theory to. ► Prepare to PRESENT and TEACH your findings to the rest of the group (PPT or Prezi) – aim for 5 to 10 minutes. ► Topics to choose from – 1 per ‘group’:  Cultivation Theory  Joseph Kappler’s Phenomenistic approach  Uses and gratifications - Blumer and Katz, 1974  Uses and gratifications – criticism of the theory