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Special Status of the Press

Feb 22, 2016

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Special Status of the Press. 1st Amendment Protections Special laws (shield laws) How do we justify this status?. Role of Press in a Democracy. Democracy can’t function without informed, critical citizens The press is the main informer of the public - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Special Status of the Press
Page 2: Special Status of the Press

Special Status of the Press

• 1st Amendment Protections• Special laws (shield laws)• How do we justify this status?

Page 3: Special Status of the Press

Role of Press in a Democracy

• Democracy can’t function without informed, critical citizens

• The press is the main informer of the public• Jefferson—A free nation requires a free

press

Page 4: Special Status of the Press

The First Amendment

• Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.

Page 5: Special Status of the Press

In the modern world of corporate press, does the press fulfill the role that justifies its

special status?

• Is the modern press (or mass media) more a lap dog for corporate interests than a watchdog?

Page 6: Special Status of the Press

Herman and Chomsky’s Propaganda Model

• Mass media is a tool for communicating messages to the public

• Function includes: amuse, entertain, inform, socialize (assimilate) people into institutions

• In a diverse society, this requires propaganda

Page 7: Special Status of the Press

Propaganda is not always obvious

• Media are in private hands• There appears to be competition• Occasionally media attack government

or corporations

Page 8: Special Status of the Press

Key Elements of Propaganda • Size, concentrated ownership, wealth &

power of owners of mass media• Advertising as the primary source of

income• A culture of ‘experts’• ‘Flak’ as a tool of discipline• ‘Civic religion’ of anti-communism and

free markets

Page 9: Special Status of the Press

Media Concentration

• The dangers of concentration (CJR)• The Big Five, an American keiretsu• Consolidation of service and content

providers– Add internet access to the new mix

Page 10: Special Status of the Press

Advertising as the Primary Source of Income

• The problem with advertising revenue—MS and ‘complementary copy’

• Subscription funded media can’t compete despite superior products and higher customer satisfaction

• Delivering targeted audiences• Killing stories (PEW study)

Page 11: Special Status of the Press

A Culture of Experts

• Talking heads and the ‘punditocracy’• Small cadre of mediagenic quasi-

experts

Page 12: Special Status of the Press

“Flak” as a Tool of Discipline

• Press attacks government, right attacks press

• Conservative ‘media watchdog’ groups

Page 13: Special Status of the Press

The Religion of the Market

• The rhetoric of free markets is one thing, the reality of markets is quite another

Page 14: Special Status of the Press

Markets, Market Assumptions, And The Invisible Hand

Page 15: Special Status of the Press

The Market Society (17th Century)

• Emphasis of individualism (autonomy)• The sovereign consumer• The law of supply and demand

Page 16: Special Status of the Press

Supply and Demand

• Elasticity of supply and demand• Price elasticity• Marginal costs and marginal benefits

(utility at the margins)

Page 17: Special Status of the Press

The Market Society (17th Century)

• Emphasis of individualism (autonomy)• The sovereign consumer• The law of supply and demand• Markets, essentially unregulated businesses,

benefit society

Page 18: Special Status of the Press

Business is to be considered as an autonomous and independent activity because it will then serve society

• Robert Solomon

Page 19: Special Status of the Press

Markets and Freedom

• Free markets are possible only within a broader context of FREEDOM

• Freedom allows capitalism to work

Page 20: Special Status of the Press

Economic and Political Freedoms

• Which take priority?

Page 21: Special Status of the Press

Marx and Capitalists Agree on the Importance of Freedom

• Capitalists emphasize the freedom of individuals to pursue their own ends through the operation of markets

• Marx emphasizes the freedom of an individual from coercive market forces

Page 22: Special Status of the Press

Market Assumptions

• Perfect Information• Perfect Competition

Page 23: Special Status of the Press

Competitive Markets are Characterized By:

• Low costs of entry• Low costs of exit• Absence of monopolies

Page 24: Special Status of the Press

Market Assumptions

• Perfect Information• Perfect Competition• Mobility Factors• Firms Maximize Profits, Consumers

Maximize Utility• Consumer Preferences are Exogenous• Few, If Any, Externalities

Page 25: Special Status of the Press

Markets, Market Assumptions, And The Invisible Hand

Page 26: Special Status of the Press

The Invisible Hand

• Individuals, seeking their own self interest, providing good products at a fair price, are guided by an invisible hand to promote the public interest

Page 27: Special Status of the Press

BUT, Historically markets produce tremendous inequality

• ‘Free trade’ advocates rarely want free trade• Markets deal poorly with values that are

hard to monetize—Richard Cory