Radio has seen vast changes in the past few years and currently is on the cusp of a defining moment in history. Gone are the days when radio was limited to being received only on an AM or FM frequency band, and more importantly, strictly on a radio. Less than a hundred years after it first began broadcasting, technology now provides listeners greater choices of how they would like to receive their music or news. Listeners can still listen to radio via AM or FM dials, but now also on their smart phones, through their computers, game consoles, televisions and even through Google Glass. The choices of what to listen to have grown as well, and listeners are no longer limited to local stations. Technology has enable people to listen to stations from around the world, and even design their own stations with music they like the best.…
The role of globalization has had a major influence on society and the world, and this essay will argue it has resulted in cultural homogenization. This can be illustrated through an introduction to globalization, the consolidation of media, ownership and vested interests, world standardization and neoliberalism, politics and the media and public service media. Examining the different views of globalization, including Appadurai and McChesney as well as other sources it can be clearly understood the negatives arising due to globalization, and its impact on cultural homogenization.…
Radio is examined here as a shaper of generational identities, as a uniting force for the creation of' ''imagined communities'' or nations, and as a nostalgic device with associational links in our past. In addition, it is portrayed as a powerful aural gadget that stimulates us cognitively not only through our imagination; our creation of images or ideas based on listening, but also through music, which engages us emotionally. Further discussed is a comprehensive history of radio in America and its contrasting relationship with newspapers and literacy, and television and its visual component. This contrast, and the existence of the radio and the ways we listen have important temporally bound characteristics that are important in understanding times, the medium itself and our relationship with it as it becomes engrained or interwoven into our everyday lives.…
Since the beginning of radio’s “golden age” in the 1940’s, this form of mass media has experienced many changes from different programming, to advertising, to broadcast laws, etc. Beginning when the first radio station, KDKA, signed on in 1920 , it was quickly being picked up as a new emerging form of mass media. By the mid-20’s radios themselves were better and easier to use, and by 1930, were being purchased by the millions. Radio not only survived but thrived through the great depression. This would only be the beginning of its journey of change. Radio, like many other mass media, has continued to evolve to meet the constantly changing wants and needs of society.…
Further, the mode of mass media could also fall under the two categories of Globalization. Television sets are produced by large corporations across the globe. These corporations just like Nintendo hire the best people and come up with strategies to market, advertise and sell their products. This falls under Globalization from above. Now the second part, the audience (people) adopt the television. It is not because of the advertisements, or marketing strategies but because the people decide to adopt and welcome the television as a source of entertainment. Watching television has become a part of life, people have started to shape the way they live according to television…
Pandora Radio: Fire Unprofitable Customers? By Chih-Hsin Chen and Pinar S. Ozer 11.10.11 Management Information Systems -INFO 503…
|evolution of mass media during the 20th |Social media sites and the internet; came the decrease in the use of over the air radio, |…
Globalization is said to be the connectedness and spread of production, technologies and communication globally. It is also what trends are for. Globalization is what all of us here in this world share in common. Personally, I can say that I am quite globalized. Our generation is, so to speak. I use many things that are commonly known and also practiced worldwide. I use social networking sites such as Facebook, Twitter and Instagram, which were created for us to communicate with everyone else around the world. Also, I patronize products such as Forever 21, Apple, Blackberry, to name a few, for my personal needs instead of buying what is locally available. In terms of food, I prefer restaurants and fast food chains which are internationally known. Instead of flying every three months to our relatives in other countries and regions, I talk to them via Skype, an international program which can make you see and talk to people around the world. I also watch shows like Gossip Girl and 90210 produced by the United States. Watching these shows influence me with the way I dress and with the way I choose things. Also, I tend to hear and use new (and improvised) words. Patronizing chick-flick movies with catchy soundtracks (also produced abroad) also interests me. Every time a video, may it be music or prank, goes viral, I tend to also watch it just to go with the “trend”. Our family also buys foreign-made cars since “they are stronger and faster”. I also watch more NBA games than our local basketball teams.These are some examples of the things I do and have which other people in all parts of the world also practice.…
The radio had become a huge factor of communication when it was introduced in the golden ages after World War 1. During the 1920’s powerful transmitters permitted stations to reach much longer audiences with nationally syndicated programs. The radio had broadcasts that gave the audience a sense familiarity with newscasters and stars for addressing consumers. During the late 20’s two-thirds of homes in the United State had a radio. A decade later, Britain had…
| |media today, as we know it. Radio use became a widespread means of communication and a |…
In previous research on the functions of the radio and the impact it had on society, radio was a very prominent and useful medium in relaying information, telling stories, and regulating moods. However much of the research done on radio has looked at the uses of radio during the 1940s-1960s when radio was a popular and favored medium. During their studies, Bryant and Oliver (2009) and Herzog (1944) both looked at why people gravitated toward radio, but what may have been an important relied upon medium then is no longer the case in the 21st century. While there is an overlap on how people nowadays utilize the radio and back then, society depends less on the radio for news or information than the television or Internet.…
Globalisation refers to the fact that we all increasingly live in one world, so that we become more interdependent in areas political, economic, financial, cultural, and social, with productivity and international distribution of labour (Giddens, A 2009). It was stimulated by the analyses of global media by Marshall McLuhan, who coined the term 'Global Village'. The dynamics of globalisation have made the world grow smaller and countries have become increasingly interlinked. Its dimensions operate at both the global level and local level at the same time. The use of satellite…
The radio has become one of our most simple forms of broadcasting and communication. From helping connect soldiers on the front line of battle to entertaining the commuter on their ride to work, the radio is a part of everyday life. With it’s low cost and simplicity of technology it is very easy to tune in to your favorite station however, it was not always this way.…
In 1969 Mcluhan and Powers analysed the process of integration of different countries and described globalisation as all nations contributing toward a ‘Global Village’. If we see this as truth this rather simplistic ideology which has been applied to many areas of our cultures including the media has of course had its impact upon the infastructure of media institutes, including how they operate and how they are governed, but also how they evolved.…
Radio was at the top of its game during the 1930’s and 1940’s (Potter 226). In 1930 50% of all households had at least one radio, and by 1947 this had increased to 93% (Potter 226). Bye 1936, there was an average of one receiver per household, and in ten years, this had doubled (Potter 226). Sports fans loved the radio because not only could they hear live broadcast but if they missed the game they could get stats all day long. There was only one catch to sports fans listening to games on the radio. Some radio stations did not have enough…