Conglomerates and the Media

Conglomerates and the Media

by Erik Barnouw
Conglomerates and the Media

Conglomerates and the Media

by Erik Barnouw

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Overview

What are the effects of increasing conglomerate ownership on the creation and dissemination of news and culture? These nine essays by leading media insiders and critics take probing, critical looks at the dramatic changes of recent years.

Opening with a fascinating overview of radio and television history by Erik Barnouw, the "dean of American media critics," the first part of the book features longtime media insiders such as Richard M. Cohen (former CBS Evening News senior producer) and Gene Roberts (former managing editor of the New York Times), writing candidly on the effects of increasing profit expectations in the newsroom. In the second part of the book, prominent media analysts, such as Mark Crispin Miller (author of Boxed In), Thomas Schatz (author of The Genius of the System), David Lieberman (USA Today), and Patricia Aufderheide (In These Times), discuss the dumbing-down of the publishing industry, the transformation of Hollywood, the increasing importance of merchandising and foreign rights in all media, and the false promise of the digital age. Finally, Thomas Frank (The Baffler) examines advertising and the possibility of resistance to conglomerate control of the media.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781565844728
Publisher: New Press, The
Publication date: 09/01/1998
Pages: 208
Product dimensions: 5.00(w) x 7.90(h) x (d)

About the Author

Patricia Aufderheide is UniversityProfessor in the School of Communication at American Universityin Washington, D.C. and the co-director of the Center for Media and Social Impact. She is a co-author of Conglomerates and the Media, published by The New Press. Aufderheide is also the co-author with Peter Jaszi of Reclaiming Fair Use: How to Put Balance Back in Copyright (University of Chicago Press, July 2011), and the author of, among others, Documentary: A Very Short Introduction (Oxford, 2007), The Daily Planet (University of Minnesota Press, 2000), and of Communications Policy in the Public Interest (Guilford Press, 1999). She heads the Fair Use and Free Speech research project at the Center for Media and Social Impact. She has been a Fulbright and John Simon Guggenheim fellow and has served as a juror at the Sundance Film Festival among others. She has received numerous journalism and scholarly awards, including the Preservation and Scholarship award in 2006 from the International Documentary Association, a career achievement award in 2008 from the International Digital Media and Arts Association, and the Woman of Vision Award from Women in Film and Video (DC) in 2010. Aufderheide serves on the board of directors of Kartemquin Films, a leading independent social documentary production company, and and on the editorial boards of a variety of publications, including Communication Law and Policy and In These Times newspaper. She has served on the board of directors of the Independent Television Service, which produces innovative television programming for underserved audiences under the umbrella of the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, and on the film advisory board of the National Gallery of Art. She received her PhD in history from the University of Minnesota.

Erik Barnouw (1908–2001) was a historian of radio and television broadcasting and a professor at Columbia University. He had a successful broadcasting career working for CBS and NBC and won the Peabody Award in 1944 for the documentary radio series Words at War. He was elected chairman of the Writer's Guild of America in 1957 and also served on the Board of Governors of the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences. Barnouw is the author of several books and a co-author (with Patricia Aufderheide, Richard M. Cohen, Thomas Frank, David Lieberman, Mark Crispin Miller, Gene Roberts, and Thomas Shatz) of Conglomerates and the Media (The New Press).

Richard M. Cohen is a former senior producer of the CBS Evening News. He is a co-author (with Patricia Aufderheide, Erik Barnouw, Thomas Frank, David Lieberman, Mark Crispin Miller, Gene Roberts, and Thomas Shatz) of Conglomerates and the Media (The New Press).

Thomas Frank is a political analyst, historian, journalist, and a columnist for Salon. He is a former columnist for Harper's Magazine and the Wall Street Journal and was the founder and editor of The Baffler. He is a co-author (with Patricia Aufderheide, Erik Barnouw, Richard M. Cohen, David Lieberman, Mark Crispin Miller, Gene Roberts, and Thomas Shatz) of Conglomerates and the Media (The New Press).

David Lieberman is the executive business editor for Deadline Hollywood where he reports on business and finance, big media, public policy, internet, and technology. Prior to joining Deadline, Lieberman was senior media reporter at USA Today. Lieberman is an adjunct professor at Fordham University's Graduate School of Business. He is a co-author (with Patricia Aufderheide, Erik Barnouw, Richard M. Cohen, Thomas Frank, Mark Crispin Miller, Gene Roberts, and Thomas Shatz) of Conglomerates and the Media (The New Press).

Mark Crispin Miller is a professor of media, culture, and communication at New York University's Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development. He is a co-author (with Patricia Aufderheide, Erik Barnouw, Richard M. Cohen, Thomas Frank, David Lieberman, Gene Roberts, and Thomas Shatz) of Conglomerates and the Media (The New Press).

Gene Roberts is a journalist and a former professor of journalism at the University of Maryland's Philip Merrill College of Journalism. He is a is a co-author (with Patricia Aufderheide, Erik Barnouw, Richard M. Cohen, Thomas Frank, David Lieberman, Mark Crispin Miller, and Thomas Shatz) of Conglomerates and the Media (The New Press).

Thomas Shatz is the Mary Gibbs Jones Centennial Chair of the Department of Radio-Television-Film at the University of Texas at Austin. He is also the director of media studies and executive director of the University of Texas Film Institute. His writing has appeared in numerous magazines, newspapers, and academic journals, including the New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, The Nation, Premiere, Film Comment, Film Quarterly, and Cineaste. Shatz is a co-author (with Patricia Aufderheide, Erik Barnouw, Richard M. Cohen, Thomas Frank, David Lieberman, Mark Crispin Miller, and Gene Roberts) of Conglomerates and the Media (The New Press).

What People are Saying About This

Thomas Schatz

In a global media culture unified by rituals of entertainment and patterns of consumption, those who cannot afford to consume are likely to be factored out of the cultural and political equation. And those social and political issues which cannot be rendered in sufficiently 'entertaining' terms are likely to be either ignored or relegateed tot he far reaches of the 500-channel universe. -- Author of The Return of the Hollywood Studio System

Richard M. Cohen

Broadcasting has lived through almost two decades of diminished seriousness and clout, as news managers dabble in entertainment values and the irrelevant, instead of solid news values and what is important, to sell their product. And it is only getting worse. -- Author of The Corporate Takeover of News

Introduction

The worst hasn't happened yet, but then again some critics have been looking for dangers in the wrong dystopian places. Big Brother isn't looming; Brave New World is. -- From the Introduction to Conglomerates and the Media
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