Comm 122 Exam 1
Explain Theodor Adorno and Max Horkheimer’s concept of “culture industry.”
Why do we say that media institutions have a dual role as a cultural industry and a public sphere?
How does ideology relate to media industries and their products?
Do media industries reproduce or challenge the hegemonic views of our times?
What is the circumscribed agency of media workers?
Give examples of institutional constraints that can limit the individual agency of media professionals. (See Havens and Lotz, pp 11-13)
What are the key differences between the process of mass media production (characteristic of mass media in the 20th century), and processes of mass customization of media (dominant in today's information economy)?
Media industry studies
Academic discipline examining structures, practices, and effects of media institutions. Explores production, distribution, consumption, and societal impacts across various media forms. Investigates economic, technological, and cultural influences on media industries.
Culture industry
Intellectual property
Public sphere
Dominant ideology
Circumscribed agency (in media industries)
Mass production
Mass customization
Niche audience
What kind of products are produced by media industries? What is unique about them?
Why do information and media products have characteristics of a public good?
When do information products operate as semi-private goods (collective goods, public good)?
Types of goods
What is a dual-product market? Why are media markets considered dual-product markets?
According to Hesmondhalgh, what are the common challenges faced by media firms in the marketplace?
What is unique about the costs of production and distribution of media products? How does that impact “risk” in the investment of production and distribution of media products?
What are the most common business practices employed by media firms to minimize “risk” in their investments?
According to Hesmondhalgh, why and how do media industries create artificial scarcities of information and media products?
public good
private good
common pool resources
collective/club good
Dual-product market
Economies of scope
Economies of scale
“Nobody knows”
Sunk cost
first copy cost
artificial scarcity
Vertical integration
Horizontal integration
Conglomeration
Cross-promotion
Format sales
Known product
media globalization
What is the main incentive for U.S. media industries to go global? Why are global media markets so important for U.S. firms?
Why do U.S. media firms enjoy a “first-mover advantage” in
international
markets, and how does that benefit their position
in the global market?
Identify some of the main factors driving the continuous global expansion of U.S. media firms.
What are the main challenges faced by U.S. media firms in the internationalization of their operations and sales?
What are ‘geo-cultural’ markets, and what are the pros and cons they present for the distribution of media products worldwide?
Pros for Worldwide Media Distribution:
Cons for Worldwide Media Distribution:
What is the difference between TV adaptations and format sales?
What is the “cultural imperialism” hypothesis?
Explain some of the strategies of U.S. media firms to overcome barriers to the internationalization of their operations and sales (i.e. dubbing and subtitling, localization and adaptation, format sales, co-productions, revenue sharing, payment of access and distribution fees). Connect concepts to examples in the case of Hollywood’s efforts to access the Chinese market.
Cultural imperialism
First-mover advantage
Localization
What is a "media mandate"?
Why is the mission or mandate of media institutions important?
a clear mission or mandate serves as a foundational framework for media institutions, shaping their identity, influencing their behavior, and contributing to their impact on society.
Historically, what has been the dominant mandate of media institutions in the U.S.? How is that different from other countries around the world?
US: Commerical
Others: State-affiliated
Who does the commercial or market media model serve?
What determines “success” under the commercial media model?
How have funding sources of U.S. commercial media evolved? What significant changes have we seen in the funding sources of commercial media in the country? Besides advertising, what are other important sources of revenues for commercial media operations?
shifting from traditional advertising to paid subscriptions
What are the benefits and limitations of the commercial or market media model for the content it produces?
Benefits:
Limitations:
What is the main difference between commercial and non-profit media?
Know the difference between mandates of different models of non-profit media: governmental, public, and community-based media
Who controls governmental media? Give examples of state-run media.
Governmental Media Control:
Examples of State-Run Media
What is the fundamental difference between government and public media?
What is the most important funding stream of U.S public broadcasting?
viewer and listener contributions
What is the most important funding stream of public broadcasting in other countries like the U.K.?
License Fees
How do we determine "success" of public media operations?
What is community media? Give examples.
Examples:
What are the benefits and limitations of non-profit media models?
Benefits:
Limitations: