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Mass
Media in America
Series Entitled: "Mediawaves"
1)
Media History
"The History of Media" outlines the historical patterns
of mass communication as a foundation for understanding the
rapidly changing media environment and the evolution of symbolic
representation, human language, and written language
2)
Mass Media in Society
This program delves into the functions media perform in culture
and in the lives of individuals. This broad range of functions
is explored in light of contrasting media systems and cultural
situations on the global stage.
3)
Print History
"Print History" begins with the birth of print technology
and traces its influence on mass literacy, and revolutions
in political, scientific, and religious thinking. As the first
"one-to-many" media technology, the printing press
was an integral part of the major social and cultural upheavals
that came to define the modern world.
4)
Images in Media
Representational images were part of human communication even
before language. This program traces the power of images in
mass communication through milestones and examines the new
and continuing issues raised by 20th century image technologies-advances
in photography, film ,video, interactive media, and digital
imaging software.
5)
Newspaper Industry
This program explores the behind-the-scenes strategies and
major trends that made newspapers the centerpiece of mass
culture in the 19th century, and helped them secure a foothold
in the increasingly complex mass media environment of the
20th century. A strong emphasis is placed on the structure
of the industry.
6)
Magazine Industry
The magazine industry was an instrumental part of the growth
of shared national culture. This program looks at the history
of magazines and how the magazine industry is structured:
how individual departments function, the economic issues the
industry faces is a rapidly changing market, ownership trends
as cross-media integration increases, and the industry's use
of the Internet and other recent technological innovations.
7)
Book Industry
As inexpensive reading material became widely available, new
waves of literary, philosophical, religious, and scientific
works joined entertaining and sometimes scandalous "dime
novels" in satisfying a mass audience that had, what
appeared to be, an endless appetite for books. This program
examines the structure of the book industry: the process of
publishing and bringing a book to market, the functions of
individual departments in a publishing company, book stores'
innovations in marketing strategy, the impact of cross-media
integration on ownership and product lines, and the impact
of new technologies on the industry.
8)
Recording History
This program explores the ongoing relationship between recording
technologies and the cultures and subcultures of music. As
the phonograph and kindred "talking machines" became
more than novelties, the demand for more entertaining content
led to a global talent search that recorded for prosperity
and profit. Expanded record sales became crucial to the rock
n' roll revolution that mixed the races and split the generations.
Waves of new technology continuously improved audio quality
and flexibility.
9)
Radio History
This program follows radio history from its invention to the
birth, expansion, and regulation of the major networks, and
through the ongoing adjustments in programming and audience
culture that have attended the advent of FM radio and television.
Radio marked the beginning of a new kind of cultural experience
that helped to reconfigure the social world.
10)
Radio Industry
This program maps the range of formats and ownership that
make up the radio industry landscape. It explores the major
networks, syndicated programming, satellite radio networks,
public broadcasting, and the legislation that guides the business
strategies of each. The picture of the industry is completed
with a look at the behind-the-scenes operations of a radio
station.
11)
Recording Industry
This program explores the industries and underlying processes
that bring recording talent to the marketplace. The recording
industry is shaped by a complex and often erratic interplay
of art and business. Production techniques constantly grow
in power and flexibility. The structure of the industry continues
to shift in the wake of changes, as well as the interaction
of media forms.
12)
Film History
This program showcases the technologies, creative imaginations,
audience cultures, and controversies of film history. The
invention of motion picture technology marked the advent of
not only a new mass medium, art form, and industry, but a
new vocabulary and grammar of human communication as well.
13)
The Film Industry
This program looks at how the complex business of motion pictures
is structured. It explores the behind-the-scenes production
processes, the new technologies that add to what is possible,
the changing strategies that drive the promotion, distribution,
and exhibition functions, and the ownership trends shaped
by increasing cross-media integration.
14)
Television History
This program looks at the growth of television as a culture
industry and the evolution of its relationship with the American
public. Television played an instrumental role in the social
rifts and ruptures of the late 60s and early 70s. Network
television was, and for a more select category of events such
as sports, still is at the center of how Americans collectively
experience their own culture.
15)
The Broadcast Television Industry
This program focuses on the structure of the broadcast television
industry that prefigured and now competes with cable television.
It covers the centralized major networks, public broadcasting,
independent stations, affiliates, and syndication. Students
will gain an understanding of the dynamics of producing programming
through a look at the departmental functions and decision-making
processes of a television station. The program also explores
how broadcast television has contended with outside variables
over the years.
16)
Cable TV and Beyond
This program focuses on the ownership trends, market segmentation,
technological innovations, cross-media ties, and legislation
that drive the cable and satellite industries. Both satellites
and cable greatly expanded the reach and flexibility of television.
Both technologies brought with them a new set of programming
possibilities, marketing strategies, and regulatory issues.
17)
Television News
This program is designed to help students better understand
how journalistic, financial, and technological considerations
combine to create the fast-paced dynamics of newsroom decision-making.
Ongoing technological advances also strongly influence what
can be reported within a newsroom budget. While it is no secret
that the business aspects of news gathering and reporting
in large measure determine what we see on the news, financial
concerns are usually kept very much "backstage."
18)
Print News
This program takes students inside newsrooms to give them
a sense of how an idea or event becomes a print story. The
program also provides a look at the evolution of investigative
journalism, wire services, and the impact of new technologies
on newsgathering.
19)
Public Relations
This program illustrates how modern public relations grew
out of the long legacy of efforts to shape how people perceive
the political and commercial worlds around them. This program
takes the viewer through the major areas of public relations
practice and the organization of the industry. It also explores
the major elements and processes that go into conducting a
public relations campaign, and key issues that the practitioners
face.
20)
Advertising
This program focuses on approaches to advertising, beginning
with the major historical milestones that have led up to how
the industry operates today. Advertising strategies depend
on the nature of the product or service, the medium, the budget,
the target audience, and other variables. These variables
are examined, both individually and in terms of how they interact
to drive the behind-the-scenes practices ad agencies follow.
The program also examines social and cultural issues that
make advertising controversial.
21)
Media Rights and Responsibilities
The process of interpreting constitutional rights to freedom
of expression and privacy becomes increasingly complex with
the advent of each new media technology. This program examines
these rights and their interpretation from their origins in
the First and Fourth Amendments through the ongoing constitutional
debates sparked by the Internet. The establishment of the
FCC, reporters' rights and responsibilities, censorship, intellectual
property, and the media's involvement in trials and courtroom
proceedings are all explored in light of constitutional assumptions
and principals.
22)
Media Ethics
This program provides a look at individual factors that differentiate
one media ethics situation from another. It also provides
an overview of the guiding principles that inform ethical
decision-making in the media so students can apply their understanding
of ethics to new situations as they arise.
23)
Media Impact
This program is designed to give students a broad understanding
of the range of variables that make up the vast gray area
between the camps. It looks at the relationships between media
consumption and political perspectives; violent behavior;
sexual conduct; socialization; and the development of cognitive
skills, attitudes, perceptions, and beliefs. These relationships
are examined in light of past and current research, as well
as public concerns that pressure legislators and media industries.
24)
Media Audience and Feedback
This program examines general patterns in the way audiences
evolve, as well as the particular characteristics of audiences
in each medium. It also illustrates the ways media researchers
collect, interpret, and use audience feedback.
25)
Media Convergence
This program begins with brief histories of the telephone
and the computer and a look at the media convergence that
became the Internet. It then proceeds to examine how the Internet
works and its implications for social relationships, education,
and the world of work.
26)
Global Media
This program is designed to give students a foundation in
the dynamics of global media culture so they can be more knowledgeable
participants.. it covers the cultural domination issue and
the challenges developing countries and indigenous cultures
face as they strive for information-age empowerment while
trying to preserve their cultural identities. It also covers
international mass media systems, the role of media in major
political changes on the global stage, and the implications
of the Internet to the structure of global communication.
As the telecourse concludes, a look at the future possibilities
of global media culture is designed to encourage students
to apply what they've learned to how they will approach the
rapidly changing media environment.
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