Monika Metykova Email: m.metykova@sussex.ac.uk 32153@mail.muni.cz Globalization of News Industries: From the Telegraph to Al Jazeera What we've learnt so far Political economy of media approach •Vincent Mosco: “political economy is the study of social relations, particularly the power relations, that mutually constitute the production, distribution, and consumption of resources, including communication resources” •Some representatives of this approach: Noam Chomsky, Edward Herman, Herbert Schiller, Vincent Mosco, Peter Golding, Graham Murdock, Ben Bagdikian, Robert McChesney, Janet Wasko What we've learnt so far Theories of the press Models of journalism/media systems Characteristics of media/cultural industries Economic characteristics of media commodities: Operate on a dual market; are affected by public interest; prone to market failure (e.g. concentration) Mark Fowler, head of The Federal Communications Commission (US regulator) “television is a toaster with pictures” His program of deregulation has brought radical change to the industry, ranging from network takeovers to the rise of home shopping networks. “In the Fowler era, broadcasting licenses, once rigorously monitored by the F.C.C., became commodities traded on the open market. Stations changed hands overnight and then changed hands again in a flurry of speculation, profit-taking and -inevitably - miscalculation and bankruptcy. The public interest, Mr. Fowler said, would be determined by the ''public's interest.'' That is, if the public didn't like the way a broadcaster was running a station, the enterprise would fail; the public didn't need the Government's help. “ http://www.nytimes.com/1987/01/19/arts/under-fowler-fcc-treated-tv-as-commerce.html What we've learnt so far Advertising as a funding mechanism: - ignores minority audiences, low-income groups and possibly results in low quality journalism PSB vs. commercial broadcasters - PSB – special roles in society and its independence from the market as well as the government is crucial What we've learnt so far Spatialization – time-space distanciation Globalization – of media products, producers, audiences and also regulation – our focus today Global village https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HeDnPP6ntic “A globalizing society?” By Allan Cochrane and Kathy Pain In David Held's A Globalizing World? Culture, Economic, Politics What is Globalization? Increasing changes and uncertainty in the world Politics, cultures and economics are merging across boundaries Example of the global software market The nature of global change -The centralization of power in the hands of just a few major organizations the notion of power as domination -Advanced communication technologies have changed the spatial frames -Big Corporations VS smaller companies Homogenization of economy and culture Significance of increased connectedness Endless expansion of unregulated capitalist relations ‘Runaway World’ (Giddens) http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/reith1999/ -Americanization/ Westernization -Destroying local cultures -e.g. Coca Cola, McDonalds -a world of “winners” and “losers” Social relations, economies, cultures and politics merging across nation-state boundaries Influencing each other Climate change—unregulated capitalist relations Worldwide concernsseeking for consensus What is Global about Globalization? Jan Scholte's Globalization: A Critical Introduction Globalization as: Internationalization Liberalization Universalization Westernization Deterritorialization “Globality (as supraterritoriality) describes circumstances where territorial space is substantially transcended” “Within the domain of our planet, location, distance and borders place no insurmountable constraints on supraterritorial relations. In this sense the yare suitably called ‘global’ phenomena”. Global players on local markets Box office hits Advertising companies Private broadcasters Inequalities in access to communication resources persist http://knowmore.washingtonpost.com/2015/02/02/map-the-worlds-telegraph-lines-in-1871/ Source: https://www.telegeography.com/telecom-maps/submarine-cable-map/index.html Foreign news flows – a few bits from history •1953 UNESCO study: •Six telegraphic agencies can be classified as world agencies (came into being between 1835 and 1918): AFP (France; 1835), AP (USA; 1848), INS (International News Service, USA; 1909), Reuters (UK; 1851), TASS (USSR; 1918), UP (USA; 1907) Source: News Agencies: Their Structure and Operation, UNESCO 1953 http://unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0007/000734/073446eo.pdf 1970s – key in addressing imbalances in news •Five news agencies dominate globally: •AFP (France); AP (USA); Reuters (UK); TASS (Soviet Union); UPI (USA) Source: The World of News Agencies; UNESCO working paper (undated) Others? •Non-aligned news pool (1970s – Yugoslav and other news agencies) •Inter Press Service (1960s Latin America) •Part of something much bigger – the NWICO (New World Information and Communication Order) discussions at UNECSO – mid-1970s and mid-1980s with the particular aim of addressing imbalances in media coverage; media influence but also issues related to technologies, protection of journalists etc. •MacBride Report: •http://unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0004/000400/040066eb.pdf •US withdrew its membership of UNESCO in 1984; with UK and Singapore following in 1985 The major players remain the same •1980s: the big four continue to dominate Reuters; UPI; AP and AFP •Not only scholarly interest (work of Oliver Boyd-Barrett) but also reported in general media: A 1981 article in the New Internationalist: Between them, the big four (Reuters, UPI, AP and AFP) send out 34 million words a day and provide 90 per cent of the entire foreign news output of the world's newspapers. The Third World, which represents over two-thirds of the world's population and area, accounts for only 25 per cent of reports from the four agencies. Since these agencies are based in the West, the major part of their news package is about events in the industrialised countries. Publisher of the Fiji Sun, Philip Harkness, complains about his editors being snowed under with British football results and other unusable material originating from the Western agencies. Running against the fast current of this broad river of news from the West is a trickle of information from the Third World which barely manages to reach the doors of the readers in New York, London or Paris. This counterflow from the developing countries is also controlled by the 'big four'. The exchange of news between the West and Asia is typical of the imbalance. AP sends out from New York to Asia an average of 90,000 words daily. In return AP takes in 19,000 words either from its correspondents or from the national news agencies of Asia. Reuters and UPI also send out four or five times more than they take from that continent. The news-gathering priorities of the news agencies are reflected in the postings of their own correspondents. Some 34 per cent are confined to the US while a further 28 per cent are based in European capitals. Only 17 per cent are in Asia and Australia, 11 per cent in Latin America, 6 per cent in the Middle East and 4 per cent in Africa. A reporter posted to Delhi is expected to cover events from Kabul in the west to Rangoon in the east - a land mass sprawling over five and a half million square kilometres. •http://newint.org/features/1981/06/01/four/ Which news are in the news flow? Check two websites in your country – what countries are the news from on the home page? Is there a world news section? What countries appear there? The West still rules on the news market in the 1990s? •1990s – e.g. Kim and Barnett’s study The Determinants of International News Flow: A Network Analysis. Communication Research 23(3), 1996 Anything new? •Al Jazeera; CCTV; RT – a bit of research on these •Counter-flow or public diplomacy tool? •Naomi Sakr (2009, p. 115) : •Well before it launched into broadcasting in English, the station was routinely credited by Western observers with having “taken on the West”, even though broadcasters in languages other than Arabic could never have competed for the same Arabic-speaking audience. The station’s supposed challenge to Western media was magnified in these reports at the very time when its staff were being harassed, imprisoned and even killed and its access to sources and audiences was being blocked. In the Arab world, meanwhile, smear campaigns portrayed the station as a lackey of US neo-imperialism or a plaything of Qatar’s ruler, whereas its actual achievement was to create an unprecedented space for pan-Arab public discussion. To the extent that these depictions misrepresented reality, they suggest that Al-Jazeera’s original Arabic-language operation did pose a threat to hegemonic interests and was predictably subject to processes of neutralisation and exclusion. • •Hillary Clinton on Al Jazeera in 2011 •https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L6sYB5d1Bu4 • In her analysis of the coverage of the global financial crisis of 2008 by Al Jazeera, CNN, RT and BBC World, Robertson argues for a more nuanced understanding of the ways in which global news media cover global crises (and events in more general). It can be argued that some channels (AJE, for example) are ‘more global’ than others when their framing strategies are considered. Nor should all global channels be relegated to the same corner of the newsroom – especially not the ‘counter-hegemonics’. Where RT reports differently from BBC World and CNN in an ‘old-fashioned’ way (i.e. a way familiar from news reporting in the cold-war decades of the 1970s and 1980s, its world marked by great power rivalry), AJE reports differently, in a ‘new-world-order’ sort of way. Its world is also bigger and its component parts more interconnected. Whether or not it is a brave new world is a question that requires more empirical analysis (Robertson 2014, p. 623–4). Are news flows still relevant? •Segev: Visible and invisible countries: News flow theory revised. Journalism 16(3), 2015. •Online news flows tested And what about new technologies? In terms of mainstream news contents online – no greater diversity found Commercial alternatives to established news agencies can also be found: http://www.demotix.com/ Importantly, the work of journalists is also changing, e.g. crowdsourcing: Ian Tomlinson case: http://www.ted.com/talks/paul_lewis_crowdsourcing_the_news Help me investigate: http://helpmeinvestigate.com/ Ushahidi http://www.ushahidi.com/ http://www.ted.com/talks/erik_hersman_on_reporting_crisis_via_texting?language=en Online-only US media move into global news Thirty of the largest digital-only news organizations account for about 3,000 jobs and one area of investment is global coverage. Vice Media has 35 overseas bureaus; The Huffington Post hopes to grow to 15 countries from 11 this year; BuzzFeed hired a foreign editor to oversee its expansion into places like Mumbai, Mexico City, Berlin and Tokyo. The two-year-old business-oriented Quartz has reporters in London, Bangkok and Hong Kong, and its editorial staff speaks 19 languages. This comes amid pullbacks in global coverage form mainstream media. The amount of airtime network evening newscasts devoted to overseas reporting in 2013 was less than half of what it was in the late 1980s. International reporters working for U.S. newspaper have declined 24% from 2003 to 2010. As the new digital native outlets continue to add staff, the country may be seeing the first real build-up of international reporting in decades – save for a few start- ups like Global Post. It could even perhaps be the start—at least in approach—of U.S.-based news outlets that are truly international, both in their audience in the focus of their content. Pew Research Center, March, 2014, “State of the News Media 2014: Overview” Transnational/Global Audiences - societies becoming increasingly multicultural – even if politicians shy away from the concept - implications for journalists/content makers/policy makers - how do media hold societies together if the audiences are fragmented? Rise of The Prosumer: Democratization of Media Content Making or Labour for Free? The example of journalism - a profession that has developed over a couple of hundreds of years - undergoing significant changes as technology impacts on all its aspects: funding, practices, relationship with audiences, skills set, structure of newsrooms etc. http://www.eyerevolution.co.uk/blog/bbc-new-broadcasting-house/ Important question for political economists of communication Do these changes result in more democratic journalism? Does control shift significantly away from journalists/editors? How do journalists understand their profession? Public service Autonomy Objectivity Immediacy Ethics What gets into the news? ÒGatekeeping ÒDavid Manning White’s seminal gatekeeping study conducted in 1949 – how and why an individual editor selects certain news stories sent by the news agencies while rejecting others (about nine tenths were rejected), White’s conclusion: through studying his overt reasons for rejecting news stories from the press associations we see how highly subjective, how based on the gatekeeper’s own set of experiences, attitudes and expectations the communication of news really is. ÒSubsequent studies pointed out that White disregarded organisational and institutional influences in the course of gatekeeping (news values: drama/surprise, importance/relevance/magnitude, entertainment, proximity, negativity/bad news etc.) News – cultural/ideological dimensions ÒAgenda setting ÒAgenda-setting is the creation of public awareness and concern of salient issues by the news media. Two basic assumptions underlie most research on agenda-setting: (1) the press and the media do not reflect reality; they filter and shape it; (2) media concentration on a few issues and subjects leads the public to perceive those issues as more important than other issues. ÒSource: http://www.utwente.nl/cw/theorieenoverzicht/Theory%20clusters/Mass%20Media/Agenda-Setting_Theory/ News – cultural/ideological dimensions cont. ÒFraming - linked to the agenda-setting tradition of research ÒFraming as a theoretical concept can be understood as the way that media emphasize certain aspects of issues or events at the expense of others when defining social processes, issues or events (Kerbel et al., 2000; Tankard, 2001). Gitlin summarizes this well by saying: ‘Frames are principles of selection, emphasis and presentation composed of little tacit theories about what exists, what happens, and what matters’ (1980: 6). Dimitrova, D. and Stromback, J. (2011). “Election news in Sweden and the United States: A comparative study of sources and media frames.” Journalism 13(5). Framing of terrorism ÒTHREAT frame – a new form of threat that requires special measures ÒRIGHTS frame – critical of the military intervention in Iraq – breach of international law; Guantanamo Bay inmates held unlawfully ÒREDRESS frame – developed by the terrorist groups themselves – redressing real/imaginary wrongs and injustices ÒDeacon et al. Researching Communications Who sets the agenda/keeps the gates closed? Mainstream media – audiences can comment, contribute contents to some extent – is this change radical enough to justify saying that journalism is more democratic now? New players – amateur and professional appear Deca – a co-operative of journalists http://www.decastories.com/ Refugees Deeply https://www.newsdeeply.com/refugees/ Citizen journalism: https://www.bellingcat.com/ Old players experiment with new tricks VR – New York Times Using technology for in-depth reporting: http://www.nytimes.com/projects/2012/snow-fall/ Technology plays a role in gatekeeping and even production of news Facebook – who does the gatekeeping for News Feeds? Algorithms or human editors? Robots replacing journalists? http://www.aljazeera.com/programmes/listeningpost/2015/11/robot-journalism-human-reporters-15111509 5033120.html Who sets the agenda? In some cases those outside the media (and that on a global scale): Wikileaks NSA leaks Panama Papers https://theintercept.com/2015/11/12/edward-snowden-explains-how-to-reclaim-your-privacy/?utm_source =Daily+Lab+email+list&utm_campaign=f2f15e1936-dailylabemail3&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_d68264fd5e -f2f15e1936-395936393