Conglomerates / Media Ownership
Media mergers that started in earnest in the mid-1980s have continued non-stop ever since. The result is that in 1984, fifty firms controlled the majority of market share in daily newspapers, magazines, television, radio, books, and motion pictures -- today, six firms control the majority of market share in these media. (Ben Bagdikian) Such concentration of the major information sources in a handful of large media conglomerates has, understandably, given rise to genuine concern among people who cherish the ideals of democracy such as free speech. In this essay we shall examine some of these concerns and also look at the other side of the picture.
The monopolistic control of the mass media by a handful of large corporations in the U.S. has reached a stage where the ordinary citizen is not being provided with the required information necessary for making informed choice while electing their political representatives. Dependence on advertising for revenues by the print media has reduced its responsiveness to readers' desires, as the publisher has become less dependent on reader payments. This has also eroded the early American...
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