New Media Implications
The improvement of internet and other technology and its ready availability to more and more people has revolutionized the structure and population of the media around the world. People that would normally be members of the audience have become the creators of news and vice versa. The lines that separate news makers and people that normally would be making news or expected to make news have blurred significantly and in several different ways. There are many examples of countries that could be focused on for this subject but one of the best is the United States.
Media Structure
There are multiple ways in which the structure of news creators has changed and evolved over recent months and years. One way in which the idea regarding audience and news sources has been altered significantly is the corporate structure of the people that are providing the news. The companies that provide the news have tentacles in areas that would be unheard of just several years ago in some cases.
One screaming example of this is the acquisition of NBC Universal, a major American cable network system with major news operations including two dedicated two news networks and owned by General Electric, by cable conglomerate Comcast. Here one has a company that is in the business of providing cable channels including many that compete directly with NBC's networks including ABC, Fox News and CNN actually owning NBC and its news channels. This sort of ownership structure blurs the lines to say the least.
Another example of concerning corporate structures of companies that provide news shows are companies that have significant presence in both news and entertainment. A sterling example of this would be Fox. Fox has a significant presence in both the entertainment and news spheres with its main Fox network that focuses mostly on entertain and its Fox News channel which ostensibly focuses on news.
A related concept is the structure of these channels that refer to themselves as news channels. For this concept, one can stay with Fox News but they are not the one ones that do this. Fox News' prime time lineup consists of several shows that cannot really be called news shows. Bill O'Reilly, Sean Hannity and Greta Van Susteren can try to put on the face that they are focusing on news stories but all three of the, the first two in particular, have very entrenched belief systems and they do little to nothing to try and hide that fact. The same could be said of NBC News, formerly known as MSNBC, which has at one point or another had the likes of Laurence O'Donnell, Keith Olbermann, Rachael Maddow and Ed Schultz.
Yet another dimension is political blogging sites like NewsBusters, Gawker, and Huffington Post. The latter is a special situation because of their close alignment with American Online (AOL) and Time Warner. The site presents itself as a regular and legitimate news blog but there has been a cavalcade of criticism all over the internet about how the Huffington operation is run and where their motivations and intentions truly lie. A similar arrangement and concern was the relationship between Microsoft Corporation and NBC News. This relationship was recently dissolved but it had continued for a number of years. One would likely have a concern as to whether or how that network would cover stories related to Microsoft or its competitors given the obvious implications of conflict of interest and who the "makers" of the news truly were. One might argue whether Microsoft was the audience or the newsmaker and how this blurs the lines of media structure. A final example is Mike Bloomberg, mayor of New York City, and his involvement in news due to his involvement with Bloomberg News. In this case, you ostensibly have a politician that is able to influence in large part what news does and does not come out about him or his rivals. Even if he is not intentionally engaging in such activity, the implications about audience vs. newsmaker and politics vs. news are obvious (Bercovici, 2011).
A final general concern regarding overall ownership structure is the concern laid forth by many that the rich and powerful have gained control of all of the major news sources and that this can lead to these rich and powerful people being able to decide what is "news" and what is not important. Parties in particular that have sounded the alarm over this are minority groups such as African-Americans who say that their concerns and cultural situations are ignored in general or are distorted and misreported when they...
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