The Business of Media: Corporate Media and the Public InterestThe Second Edition of The Business of Media: Corporate Media and the Public Interest provides students with the critical, yet careful, analysis of the rapidly changing media industry that they need in order to get behind the headlines and understand our increasingly media-saturated society. Authors David Croteau and William Hoynes examine the possible influence media changes are having on society-paying particular attention to the tension between the media industry's insatiable quest for profits and a democratic society's need for a media system that serves the public interest. The Second Edition has been revised and updated to include analysis of the media business in the early years of the 21st century! |
Contents
X | 15 |
XI | 17 |
XIII | 19 |
XIV | 21 |
XV | 22 |
XVI | 23 |
XVII | 26 |
XVIII | 28 |
LXII | 144 |
LXIII | 147 |
LXIV | 150 |
LXV | 151 |
LXVI | 153 |
LXVIII | 155 |
LXIX | 156 |
LXX | 157 |
XIX | 29 |
XX | 30 |
XXI | 32 |
XXII | 33 |
XXIII | 34 |
XXIV | 36 |
XXV | 38 |
XXVI | 41 |
XXIX | 43 |
XXX | 47 |
XXXI | 50 |
XXXIII | 53 |
XXXIV | 56 |
XXXV | 57 |
XXXVI | 63 |
XXXVII | 65 |
XXXIX | 71 |
XL | 73 |
XLI | 75 |
XLII | 76 |
XLIII | 77 |
XLIV | 78 |
XLV | 96 |
XLVI | 102 |
XLVII | 107 |
XLVIII | 110 |
XLIX | 111 |
L | 113 |
LI | 117 |
LII | 118 |
LIII | 121 |
LV | 124 |
LVI | 127 |
LVII | 130 |
LVIII | 137 |
LIX | 138 |
LX | 141 |
LXI | 143 |
LXXI | 158 |
LXXII | 159 |
LXXIII | 162 |
LXXIV | 164 |
LXXVI | 166 |
LXXVII | 169 |
LXXVIII | 170 |
LXXIX | 177 |
LXXX | 178 |
LXXXI | 180 |
LXXXII | 184 |
LXXXIII | 187 |
LXXXIV | 189 |
LXXXV | 191 |
LXXXVI | 192 |
LXXXVIII | 204 |
LXXXIX | 206 |
XC | 208 |
XCIII | 214 |
XCIV | 216 |
XCV | 221 |
XCVI | 223 |
XCVII | 225 |
XCVIII | 227 |
C | 235 |
CI | 243 |
CII | 244 |
CIII | 246 |
CIV | 249 |
CV | 250 |
CVI | 254 |
CVII | 258 |
CVIII | 259 |
CXII | 271 |
281 | |
295 | |
CXV | |
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Common terms and phrases
advertisers American antitrust AOL Time Warner audience brand business of media buys cable television Center changes citizens civic commercial media Communications compete competition competitors concentration consumers corporate censorship corporate media cultural democracy democratic deregulation develop Disney diverse efforts entertainment ESPN example Federal Communications Commission film fin-syn forms of media global integration issues journalism journalists LPFM magazines market model mass media media business media conglomerates media content media corporations media giants media industry media outlets media ownership media policy media products media system mergers Microsoft million monopoly movie newspaper Nickelodeon perspective players political potential profits programs Prometheus Radio Project promote public interest public sphere model radio stations regulations result revenue role segments sell serve the public social society Staples Center stories strategies studios Telecommunications Act television networks theaters tion Viacom viewers Warner