How Large Cooperations Affect what we hear

It comes as little surprise to most Americans that any large cooperation is going to seek out strategies that sell their good or service. However, as chapter six began to evaluate, a gaping conflict of interest begins to arise when large corporations in the mainstream news media chose to maximize profits before serving their intended purposes to the American people. As the book described, the original framers of the constitution universally agreed that the media served an essential role in politics. To them, and even to us today, it is widely known that the main responsibilities of the mainstream media was to act as a watchdog for the people, clarifying electoral choices, and providing information to the public regarding different policies and their effectiveness. However, what I wanted to learn was how much emphasis news corporations put on these guiding principles today and what other factors now go into sharing news with the public.

As previously mentioned, the mainstream news industry is made up of a series corporations, the most prominent being large conglomerates such as Disney, CBS, and Time Warner. These news networks are so powerful, in fact, that together the make up a 1.8 trillion dollar industry that is continuing to grow. The value of these companies is particularly concerning because of their responsibilities to the public. Because they are privately owned, the business professionals at the top of the industry have own main goal in mind, to make money. At first it did not dawn on me how this was important, as I had the frame of mind that all news industries had to do was broadcast/ publish the real news, and people would naturally watch. However, through further investigation, it is quite apparent that that is not the case.

In a Pew Research Center for People and the Press, they found that the number of people who follow the news closely dropped by 7% from the 1980’s to the 1990’s and then increased back to its original percentages during the early 2000’s and into today. The reason behind this strange dip during the 1990’s is now hypothesized to be because of the relative peacefulness and economic and social prosperity that enveloped the nation during this period. As a result, there is a clear correlation between a dip in news followers and a spike in prosperity throughout the nation. This ultimately serves as a major problem as news programs and other outlets decide what they should release to the public.

This research begins to tell us a lot about the forces that drive the large news conglomerates to push certain stories over others. For example, the book describes one situation in which news companies in the early 2000’s, following the 9/11 attacks, decided to ignore an incident in which US officials were accused of “cooking the books” in order to justify the Iraq war. Instead, news companies during this time focussed all of its attention on an accidental shooting involving former Vice-President Dick Cheney. The bottom line that has been proven by all of these incidents is that controversy and scandal sell. As a result, news companies consistently choose stories that will evoke the most emotions and avoid stories that may be less controversial, but much more important to the well being of an informed citizenry. This is quite clearly a problem our nation must address, as it is clear that the information provided to the U.S. public can be easily manipulated by large business owners and their pursuit for profits; something vastly different than the founding fathers had ever intended.

Sources:

  1. “Entertainment and media industry market size.” Statista. Accessed October 24, 2017. https://www.statista.com/statistics/237749/value-of-the-global-entertainment-and-media-market/.
  2. Brainard , Curtis. “What Kind of News Do People Really Want?” Columbia Journalism Review, archives.cjr.org/behind_the_news/what_kind_of_news_do_people_re.php.

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