¶ … interview with President-elect Donald Trump shows how televised media creates negotiated codes within a hegemonic framework. In an attempt to convey objectivity, the interviewer, along with the editor as well as television producer, create a narrative that conveys hegemonic meaning or a "metacode," (Hall 3). The result is what Hall calls "systematically distorted communication," (Hall 3). The interviewer fails to acknowledge, recognize, or bring to the viewer's attention the discrepancies and logical fallacies in the substantive content of Trump's discourse. By refraining from reframing Trump's message, the interviewer perpetuates misinformation. For example, Trump discusses his desired appointment to the Supreme Court of a conservative judge who will be decisively "pro-life" and affirms that overturning Roe v. Wade is an embedded goal of his presidency. He later claims that the LGBTQ community has nothing to fear because "It's law. It was settled...it's done...these cases have gone to the Supreme Court." Roe v. Wade was settled over three decades ago. If the same-sex marriage ruling is "settled," and "done," then why isn't Roe v. Wade also presented as "settled"?...
Trump's continued assertion that he wants to "make America great again" implies that America is not great now, and that he wants to revert to some previous time in American history. Because of Trump's failure to disavow support by the KKK and other neo-Nazi and hate groups, it is difficult not to read into the layers beneath the slogan "Make America Great Again." America is barely out of the Jim Crow era. Trump even goes so far as to admit, "sometimes you need a certain rhetoric to get people motivated," in direct response to a question related to his xenophobic, isolationist policies. The "rhetoric" Trump refers to is hate-filled and racist.Our semester plans gives you unlimited, unrestricted access to our entire library of resources —writing tools, guides, example essays, tutorials, class notes, and more.
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