Uses and Gratifications theory assumes an active audience and focuses on why and how people use media rather than a media text's content. It posits that audiences use media to fulfill various needs like diversion, personal relationships, identity, and surveillance. The same media can fulfill different needs for different people depending on their background and situation. Key gratifications include relationships, identity, diversion, and surveillance. Lifestyle magazines in particular may provide readers a sense of identity, companionship, guidance, and escapism as well as fulfilling needs around relationships, careers, and material possessions.
Elective Care Conference: keynote speech from Adam Sewell-JonesNHS Improvement
Outlining NHS Improvement's national priorities and how we'll support providers.The slides accompanied NHS Improvement's Executive Director of Improvement's keynote speech.
Elective Care Conference: keynote speech from Adam Sewell-JonesNHS Improvement
Outlining NHS Improvement's national priorities and how we'll support providers.The slides accompanied NHS Improvement's Executive Director of Improvement's keynote speech.
Uses & Gratifications Theory, Leading Discussion, Fardin Ayar.pdfAfghanistan
The belief that the use of media depends on the satisfaction, need, desire or motivation of each audience is almost as old as media research. Audiences are often formed based on the similarity of individual needs, interests and tastes, which have a social or psychological origin.
This way of thinking is belonging to the school of research called (use and gratification or interest and satisfaction) (McQuoid).
This approach was first described in an article by Katz (1959), which Katz began with the question, "What do people do with the media?"
2. Uses and Gratifications 1974
Assumes an ACTIVE audience
Asks “WHY DO PEOPLE WATCH TV?”
Or “WHAT DO PEOPLE DO WITH THE
MEDIA?”
Focuses on the ways audiences can
benefit from a media text not its content
3. Uses and Gratifications 1974
Gratification can come from;
Content of a programme
Familiarity with a genre (Soap Operas)
General exposure to the media
Social context (how we watch it with
family, friends etc)
4. Uses and Gratifications 1974
People’s NEEDS influence how they use
and respond to the media
Task - if you were bored what sort of
programme would you choose to watch?
Task - if you were “stressed-out” what sort
of programme would you choose?
5. Uses and Gratifications 1974
The same programme may gratify different
needs in different people
Audience needs depend on ALL aspects
of our background, personality and
situation.
6. Uses and Gratifications 1974
Blumler and Katz identified FOUR reasons for
using a media text.
1. Diversion - escape from everyday issues
2. Personal relationships - using the media for
interaction e.g. substituting family for soap
operas
3. Personal identity - learn behavior and values
from texts. Identify with characters.
4. Surveillance - useful information e.g. weather
reports, news etc
8. CASE STUDY
Lifestyle Magazines
Lifestyle magazines offer a range of uses and
gratifications for the reader, not only advice but also a
sense of identity and possibly companionship and
reassurance. They appear to share with their readers
the problems and issues of other similar people who
have also read the magazine. The magazines also
appear to offer guidance and instructions of how to
live a particular lifestyle as well as entertainment and
escapism. The magazines also offer aspiration
(ambition) in relationships, careers, material
possessions and looks
(Adapted from Media Studies By Kruger et al 2001)