Overview Describes the ability of the news media to influence the salience of topics on the public agenda The media cant tell you what to think but can tell you what to think about Developed by Dr Maxwell McCombs and Dr Donald Shaw they found that the issues thought of as importa ID: 596588
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AGENDA SETTING THEORYSlide2
Overview
Describes the “ability of the news media to influence the salience of topics on the public agenda”
The media can’t tell you what to think, but can tell you what to think about
Developed by Dr. Maxwell McCombs and Dr. Donald Shaw – they found that the issues thought of as important correlated to the issues that the media most reports on
The theory is well-founded and remains relevantSlide3
Key underlying principles
We live in an age of Mass Communication; this theory is aimed at Forms of Media with wide reach (news, radio, television)
The press and the media do not reflect reality; they filter and shape it.
Media concentration on a few issues and subjects leads the public to perceive those issues as more important than other issuesSlide4
Traditional Explanation
REALITY
AGENDA
PERCEPTION OF REALITY
Selection, Omission and
how stories are framed
ACCESSIBILITY TO MEDIASlide5
REALITY
AGENDA
Selection, Omission and
how stories are framed
What the Media
Magnates want
What people want to hear and will make them buy the media product
What is trending on the webSlide6
Case Study 1 – Murdoch Press
News Limited had successive covers on the Daily Telegraph and other newspapers lampooning the Rudd government and calling for their electoral defeat
Gillard addressing the sexist treatment against her was “playing the gender card”
Studies have shown
there is a considerable time lag between strong editorial positions appearing consistently in the
media,
and this filtering through into the public consciousness.
It
can be over a month before people start to spontaneously
recall media
messages
as being important
Though this is highly situational and tends to be based on the capacity of the audience to assess the issue independently of the media's messaging
.Slide7
The shaping of public dispositions through the theory develops over longer time-
frames
In
order for a “hate campaign” to work, the agenda must in some way be based on people’s already-existing dislike of a certain group. The media must develop an agenda based on the fears and hatred already
existing
We see people burn down the houses of paedophiles, but seldom rise up against the “dodgy builders” featured on Today Tonight. Slide8
Case Study 2 – Asylum Seekers
News reports about Asylum Seekers
Daily Telegraph, Herald Sun frame issues with headlines like ‘Costing Us a Packet’ and ‘Boat People in Our Suburbs’
The Media created the term ‘Boat People’ and by overtly-covering the issue, they frame it as an economic and social burden upon society.
They could
instead discuss
it in regards to humanitarian and international
obligations, but no.
Based upon society’s current fears and xenophobiaTony Abbott won the 2013 Election; what was his main slogan?