Thursday, November 22, 2018

Ideological Perspectives of Newspapers & Representation



Newsworthiness
The process of selecting which stories include involves weighing up their newsworthiness

Intertextuality

Where a media product makes sense, only through it's reference to other media products

Bias
inclination or prejudice for or against one person or group, especially in a way considered to be unfair



  1. The 2016 election results, Memorial day, Doctor who weeping angels, planet of the apesImage result for planet of the apes statue of liberty
Also making reference to war movies and documentaries
  1. That the producer knows about what is occurring is the USA at the time of the newspapers publication
  2. That liberals are not smart, that the daily mirror do not like Donald Trump, for example expressing their anger by using "what have they done?"

The mise-en-scene of the dark cloud is a proairetic code, inferring it will bring the country to war
Statue of liberty represents America
Assumed knowledge, producers believes that the audience already know Donald Trump "It's president trump"
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Image result for uk parties political spectrum
Left-wing is more about equality
Belief in the government regulation
The power of the government
Collectivism
Right-wing is more about hierarchy
Free market
The rights of the individual
Individualism
Broadsheet are more serious and contain a lot more wording on their covers and address many issues in a serious matter, more emphasis on writing. Aimed towards higher classes/ middle classes.
Undeniably Conservative, broadsheet makes a lot of assumed knowledge, and their content is quite political.

Tabloids are more comedic, punny, jokes about what is occurring in the news. Their covers contain a lot of big one worded titles with big pictures covering the cover. They are more aimed towards lower classes. The type face is much larger, implying that their target audience has a lack of education.
Provocative, sensationalist. Informal and colloquial (writing with abbreviations and slang)

Polysemy: many interpretations 
Anchorage: The 'fixing' of a particular meaning to a media text, often through the use of captions
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Put him in a bin, saying that he's disgusting and trash. Also funny for kids
The use of the pun in the title, is aimed towards the working-class as the target audience
Lists everything negative about Corbyn in bullet points in a very straight forward way, emphasises how many things are terrible with Corbyn.
The use of colloquial language "Jezza" suggest that he's childish.
Enemy to the UK

The sun does this so they can construct the right wing audience
Bias: favouring one viewpoint over another
Agenda: The underlying intentions of a group.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------






No comments:

Post a Comment