Spelling suggestions: "subject:"cublic broadcasting"" "subject:"bublic broadcasting""
11 |
A comparative study of viewers’ attitude towards commercial advertising interruptions in public television programmesShobiye, Toyin Esther January 2017 (has links)
A thesis submitted to the Faculty of Arts in fulfilment of the requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Department of Communication Science at the University Of Zululand, South Africa, 2017 / This study examines the function and purpose of public television broadcasters across two countries (South Africa and Nigeria) in order to highlight best practices in public broadcasting for the benefit of the public (who ought to be the target audience). The original idea of public broadcasting was aimed at informing the public about the truth without commercial or political provocation and influence. This study examines whether society has come to accept inappropriate broadcasting practices because of prolonged exposure to these practices. When incorrect behaviour is practised continually over a prolonged period, it becomes accepted as normal in society and this is referred to as normalcy. In this regard, the study was further aimed at investigating and comparing the attitude of viewers towards commercial advertising interruptions during public television viewing time. Literature review within this study also focused on factors which influence viewer rating of public television in Nigeria and South African which ought to be informative and educational while providing suitable entertainment. This study employed a survey method and was conducted among the inhabitants of Durban in KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa and Ibadan, South-West, Nigeria. The study was interesting in that viewers’ attitudes across the two countries differed significantly. Generally, South African TV viewers were more accommodating with regards to accepting commercial interruptions during viewing time. On the other hand, Nigerian TV viewers felt that commercial interruptions are disturbances and must not be included in the programmes of public television. The study confirmed that the motives of viewing public TV and behaviour of viewers during the commercial interruptions on the programmes of public TV stations have greatly influenced the attitudes of viewers towards commercial interruptions. Finally, the study offers recommendations guidelines in areas that need more attention based on findings of the study. The study also indicates the limitations of the investigation and provides suggestions for future research.
|
12 |
American public journalism : could it work for the CBC? /McKie, David C. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (M.J.)--Carleton University, 2001. / Includes bibliographical references (p. 134-145). Also available in electronic format on the Internet.
|
13 |
The formation of the public broadcasting servicePepper, Robert M. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Wisconsin--Madison, 1975. / Typescript. Vita. eContent provider-neutral record in process. Description based on print version record. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 356-367).
|
14 |
Mediating the nation-building agenda in public service broadcasting: convergence active user-generated content (AUGC) for television in KenyaAmbala, Anthony Terah January 2016 (has links)
A thesis submitted to the Faculty of Humanities, University of Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy, 2016 / The
violence, destruction and
death
of
more
than
1
200
people
resulting
from
the
highly
disputed
2007
election
results
in
Kenya
was
a
considerable
watershed
moment.
It
exposed
the
deep
fragmentation
within
the
nation-‐state
and
became
a
significant
fissure
for
the
simmering
tensions
among
the
42
“tribes”
of
Kenya.
In
the
media-‐scape,
these
events
evinced
the
elitist
and
tribal
hegemony
in
media
ownership
and
revealed,
more
than
ever
before,
that
certain
voices
and
narratives
were
privileged
over
others.
These
events
also
unmasked
recurrent
motifs,
which
illuminated
the
stranglehold
that
the
political,
media
and
economic
elites
wielded
over
media
instruments
and
platforms,
for
their
own
benefit.
This
study
aims
to
explore
the
extent
to
which
active
user-‐generated
content
in
the
digital
media
space
can
intervene
in,
and
disrupt,
some
of
these
exclusionary
practices
in
the
public
service
mediascape,
to
potentially
inspire
a
re-‐imagination
in
this
space
for
nation
building
in
Kenya.
It
is
premised
on
a
participatory
action
research
approach
that
draws
on
theoretical
discourse
on
nationalism
and
nation
building,
as
this
is
the
field
from
which
the
study’s
key
problems
stem
and
where
conceptual
discourses
on
digital
media
converge.
The
study
also
draws
on
participatory
discourses
in
the
media,
as
these
potentially
present
an
emancipatory
platform
for
those
on
the
margins
of
the
hegemonic
centres.
Here
it
mainly
draws
on
Bhabha’s
cultural
difference
theory,
Billig’s
banal
nationalisms,
Jenkins’
ideas
on
convergence
culture,
Carpentier’s
thoughts
on
maximalist
media
participation
and
Thumim’s
assertions
on
self-‐representation
in
the
digital
space.
The
study
also
hinges
on
the
practice-‐informed
pilot
project
titled
Utaifa
Mashinani
Masimulizi
ya
Ukenya
(UMMU)
digital
narratives,
co-‐created
by
the
researcher
together
with
the
Abakuria
(the
Kuria
people)
of
Kenya.
This
is
a
community
marginally
represented
in
the
public
service
broadcasting-‐scape
in
Kenya
and
a
people
whose
narrative
discourse
is
seldom
present
in
the
public
sphere.
The
study
argues
that
broadcast
content
–
not
just
in
Kenya
but
also
in
Africa
–
on
User
Generated
Content
(UGC)
for
broadcasting
predominantly
focuses
on
passive
forms
of
UGC
rather
than
Active
User
Generated
Content
(AUGC)
-‐
a
term
coined
in
this
study
to
refer
to
user-‐generated
content
that
entails
a
more
meaningful,
emancipatory
and
empowering
form
of
participation
amongst
those
traditionally
referred
to
as
consumers
of
broadcast
content.
It
contends
that
although
many
contemporary
television
broadcasters
around
the
world
continue
to
create
a
perception
of
increasing
and
robust
audience
participation
in
televised
content,
in
Kenya
this
is
certainly
not
the
case.
It
argues
that
significant
forms
of
current
participation
on
television
are
illusionary,
minimalist
and
futile,
as
they
largely
entrench
television’s
balance
of
power
among
the
media
elites.
Ordinary
people
are
often
‘invited’
to
participate
in
broadcasting,
but
their
entry
point
into
these
narratives
tends
to
be
limited
to
accessing
already-‐completed
narratives
and
engaging
in
what
constitutes
token
participation,
with
minimal,
and
in
most
cases,
no
impact
on
the
story,
its
conception,
distribution
and
socio-‐ economic
benefits.
Drawing
on
insights
from
the
UMMU
project,
the
study
proposes
that
AUGC
can
potentially
disrupt
some
of
the
existing
tropes
and
motifs
in
the
Public
Service
Mediascape
opening
up
spaces
for
multiple
and
diverse
voices
and
narratives
in
Kenya.
This
potentially
enables
active
participation
from
constituencies
that
have
traditionally
been
on
the
margins
of
the
Kenyan
nation-‐state
to
partake
in
the
nation
building
process. / XL2018
|
15 |
Broadcasting Policy in Australia: Political Influences and the Federal Goverment's Role in the Establishment and Development of Public/Community Broadcasting in Australia - A History 1939 to 1992Thornley, Phoebe Neva January 1999 (has links)
Utilizing published and unpublished sources and working with interviews of a number of participants this thesis examines the evolution of the political influences that stimulated the Australian federal government's policy decisions on public broadcasting. The background to the federal government's original involvement in broadcasting in the early years of the twentieth century is investigated to put later developments into a broader perspective. Comparisons are also drawn with progress in other comparable Western countries to highlight the unique nature of the Australian model. Since broadcasting was never an issue, like health and education, which could capture votes from the electorate as a whole, government policy was driven by pressure from particular special interest groups as their influence waxed and waned and calls from individual electorates, when the interest was strong and the seat was marginal. The government decisions that resulted from this situation were ad hoc and expedient and no really coherent policy was ever implemented. This thesis examines the forces that led to the restriction in the expansion of broadcasting services after World War 2 and to the change in the influence of pressure groups in the 1960s which led to the establishment of FM and public broadcasting in the 1970s. A detailed exploration of particular interests, such as the Public Broadcasting Association of Australia, educational broadcasters and ethnic broadcasters shows how the influence of different groups changed over time. Once public broadcasting was established the main concern of both broadcasters and government was to keep the sector economically viable. A detailed analysis is provided of how the funding arrangements altered as the sector grew. There were always some idealists who saw public broadcasting as a vehicle for putting forward their own point of view. But, this thesis concludes that, by the early 1990s, apart from its role as regulator, which was the same for commercial broadcasting, government policy on public broadcasting was largely driven by the fact that minimal funding for the sector enabled government to ensure that essential non-commercially viable broadcasting services that would be far more expensive for the government to provide itself, were able to continue. / PhD Doctorate
|
16 |
Sermon and surprise: the meaning of scheduling in broadcast radio history /Sahota, Anu. January 2006 (has links)
Extended Essays (M.A.) - Simon Fraser University, 2006. / Theses (School of Communication) / Simon Fraser University. Senior supervisor : Dr. Catherine Murray. Also issued in digital format and available on the World Wide Web.
|
17 |
Rundfunkgebührenfinanzierung unter dem GATS /Schmidt, Hans-Martin. January 2008 (has links) (PDF)
Zugl.: Mainz, Universiẗat, Diss., 2007.
|
18 |
Public service broadcasting and diversity in the digital age: policy and options for SABC televisionSkinner, Katherine Alicia Mary January 2017 (has links)
A dissertation submitted to the Faculty of Humanities, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy / The thesis critically analyses the potential of digital technologies – in particular, digital terrestrial television – to enable substantive diversity of programming in a public service broadcaster, the South African Broadcasting Corporation. The thesis deploys critical political economy of the media approaches. These approaches argue for a social constructivist approach to technology and not a celebratory determinist approach, which confuses the potential of technology with what actually happens in ‘real world’, contested policy contexts. The research uses qualitative methodologies, specifically thematic analyses of policy texts and in-depth interviews with policy actors and informants. Ultimately, the thesis finds that the changing political context in South Africa, which has moved away from participatory policy making processes, has resulted in missed opportunities to harness the digital potential to diversify programming. The thesis finds that with the government’s deployment of more authoritarian ‘statist’ and market-orientated policies, the policy space has narrowed, ultimately limiting the possibilities for the delivery of substantive diversity of content and programming. Finally, the thesis finds that to begin to reverse these trends in the digital, multi-channel environment, the government needs to (re)commit to consultative policy making processes and to regulation and public funding in the public interest. / XL2018
|
19 |
Limites do público e privado na paisagem midiática televisão pública: cidadania e consumo / Limits of public and private media landscape in public television: Citizenship and consumptionCury, Maria Cecília Andreucci 17 March 2009 (has links)
Made available in DSpace on 2016-10-13T14:10:30Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1
limites_do_publico_e_privado_.pdf: 3488526 bytes, checksum: d78a06c70776fdef8723c94648f204d5 (MD5)
Previous issue date: 2009-03-17 / The proposal of this study is to reflect on how public television is perceived by its viewers and the cultural content it is expected to provide. It endeavors to explore the cultural imagination of this mass media segment, by examining its ideal format, the pivotal role it plays and the value attributed to it. In an effort to consolidate these perceptions the study also attempts to evaluate the perceived boundaries that separate the public and private spheres of this section of the mass media landscape, by analyzing the extent to which the sale of private advertising, in an effort to provide public television with financial sustainability, can at the same time provoke ethical concerns among the citizen-viewers. More specifically it aspires to study how the citizen-viewer understands and acknowledges the different forms of financing that are available for a public television system. Then based on qualitative research, the ethical and esthetic questions surrounding Brazilian public television are analyzed by investigating whether or not this society s concept of ideal public television can include advertising / O trabalho propõe-se a refletir sobre como a TV pública é percebida por seu telespectador e seu esperado conteúdo cultural. Busca-se explorar o imaginário cultural deste espaço midiático, sua forma ideal, seu papel e o valor a ele atribuído. Consubstanciando tal entendimento, procura-se ainda avaliar as fronteiras percebidas entre as esferas públicas e
privadas nesta paisagem midiática. Pretende-se analisar em que medida a venda de espaços publicitários à iniciativa privada, na estratégia de sustentabilidade financeira da TV pública, pode suscitar preocupações éticas no público-cidadão. Mais especificamente, aspirou-se estudar como o público-cidadão entende e acolhe as diferentes formas de financiamento de um sistema publico de televisão. Com base em pesquisa qualitativa, a autora faz um ensaio
sobre questões éticas e estéticas acerca da televisão pública no Brasil, investigando se a concepção de TV pública ideal da sociedade comporta a publicidade
|
20 |
A Discourse Analysis of the Corporation for Public Broadcasting in Reaction to Proposed Funding CutsSchroder, Matthew 06 September 2017 (has links)
Federal funding has been a frequent political issue for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB). The corporation has come under the threat of being defunded many times since its inception. Those calls have been renewed with the election of President Donald Trump. The CPB defends its existence by citing an inability of the commercial broadcasting market to produce content for certain demographics such as minorities and children. Public media’s opponents believe the opposite is true. This thesis critically examines the discourse of the CPB for appeals to fear that may be exuded as a result of existing in a state of frequent funding threat. A historical background is also established showing how public media in the United States exists as part of a broadcasting system that has been dominated by commercial interests, and how those commercial interests have been responsible for stifling non-profit and educational broadcasting in the country.
|
Page generated in 0.062 seconds