Tuesday, April 8, 2008

The FCC's Personal Enforcer

$56 thousand in fines was issued to Fox for showing indecent scenes on its reality TV show "Married by America" during the FCC's indecency enforced time slot of 6 a.m. to 10 p.m.

The Justice Department backed the FCC by issuing the fines the same day Fox requested the fines be dropped, which the FCC denied.

In 2004 the FCC levied fines on 5 stations owned by Fox and 3 owned by Baltimore-based Sinclair Broadcast Group for a scene in which partially nude males and female strippers where walking around a bachelors party with plenty of pixilation.

The FCC has released a statement stating that they have an obligation to protect the children in each market. Initially there where 169 fines of $7 thousand each issued to the Fox affiliates who aired the program. That has since been reduced to thirteen stations in which there where formal viewer complaints.

Is it in the Justice Department's best interest to be getting involved with the FCC's battles with Fox? Is this something similar to congress getting involved with baseball's issue on steroids?

Fox has failed to accept responsibility for its actions and the battle has come to require some form of outside enforcement. Four stations have paid their fines and one was dropped since no formal complaint was submitted, leaving 8 stations left fighting the FCC, and now the Justice Department.

Justice Department Sues Fox

Tuesday, March 25, 2008

All Eyes on China

China is slated to host the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing with high hopes of showing the world its progress with human rights.

As of late the Tibetan region has been blocked off from journalists and even internet sites trying to report on the large protests in Tibet. CNN was stopped hundreds of miles away and turned back, the BBC has been denied access and YouTube has been blocked from access across China.

China has gained incredible control over access to particular internet sites by creating what has become known as the "The Great Firewall of China" or the Golden Shield Project. An extremely effective, well-funded endeavor made by China to control what is being reported out of Tibet and Taiwan and other sensitive regions, onto the internet.

One sided coverage has become the tactic used by the Chinese government to try and control protesters, airing hour after hour of violent protests, riots and burned down shops. Not one clip was aired of peaceful protesting, pulling out all stops to prevent a Tibetan uprising.

With at least 25 journalists being forced out of these regions and the end of media permits being issued to foreign correspondents, China's once positive steps towards freedom of movement for foreign media is now being drawn back to prevent the truth of what is happening in Tibet to be made clear to the world.

The Summer Olympics are fast approaching us and the keen eyes of the world watching what is taking place in China, what are the Olympics going to be like? With foreign media being held out of certain regions, what kind of coverage will the Olympics have this year?

China has tried to use the Olympics to their advantage to show progress in their nation, now it only appears that the world will see regression among human rights.

The Whole World is Watching: China's Media War

Tuesday, March 18, 2008

The Next Fad: iReporting

The newest hit of the internet in 2008: iReport.com. CNN has created a YouTube-like website for users to upload breaking news to the internet for others to watch and some clips make it onto CNN or CNN.com.

While CNN intends to start small and see the direction the site goes, there are quite a few ethics issues I see involved with this. The idea of iReporting was initiated in 2006 by CNN and there have been clips users have sent in that have been aired on TV. However these clips were checked for creditability before being shown nationally.

iReport.com's domain name was purchased for $750 thousand last month and was recently launched, allowing for any and all content to be uploaded as news. There will be no prior investigating of the content and that creates an issue of iReport.com users believing anything and people falling victim to false claims that may be out there.

This kind of defamation and misleading media is already an issue on YouTube, which does not cast itself as any sort of news website. What is going to happen down the road when people upload clips of false news and create a disturbance about something that has no factual backing.

iReport.com is a great idea in terms of getting the nation involved with the news but this will also create to many Bill O'Reilly wanna-bes and there is going to be an issue of ethics involved in the site if it makes it mainstream.

CNN launches iReport.com

Tuesday, March 11, 2008

Sony and Superballs

Sony has a new line of televisions out called Bravia, an acronym for Best Resolution Audio Visual Integrated Architecture and Sony has turned advertising for this new line into an aspiring art. From dropping a quarter million Super Balls to exploding 70 thousand liters of paint, Sony has masterminded awesomeness in advertising.

Their most recent ad (recorded but not yet aired) has Sony filling the streets of Miami in bubbles. TV's and bubbles??? No idea the connection but after watching 70 thousand liters of paint explode in such beautiful fashion (below) I felt inspired to go out and buy a flat screen TV, so someone in the advertising department deserves a raise.

Does creating a commercial that has absolutely nothing to do with the actual product make any sense on the profit side of things? Who knows but after watching the commercials you will not forget Sony or Bravia.

I think Sony has artfully remastered techniques in advertising with simply creating super-sweet ads that will keep Bravia stuck in the back of your head. I can not think of a Toshiba or Panasonic commercial that completely defined "wowness".

Sony Bravia: Quarter-million Super Balls

Sony Bravia: 70,000 Liters of Paint

Advertising As Performance Art

Tuesday, March 4, 2008

Newspaper in Your Pocket

Apple has recently released its new brain child, the i-Pod touch. Similar to its big brother the i-Phone, minus the phone, the i-Touch will connect to the internet (and surf at high-speed) through any wi-fi hot spot in the area, using Apple's Safari browser.

With the revolution of having access to the internet at all times, newspapers next step is to figure out out how to adapt to these new high-tech devices, according to Guardian editor Alan Rusbridger. "The world of newspapers will shudder on its axis and journalists will have a responsibility to have our editorial offering in a shape that will readily adapt to whatever comes along next."

For the last decade, newspapers have been scurrying around trying to find a way to keep print (and the newspaper itself) alive with todays instant accessibility to any and all news through the web. The New York Times has taken a step out into using new technology for its paper by coming to an agreement with Microsoft to use its on-screen reader to flip through the pages of the Times just like you would if you were holding it.

Perhaps with the i-Touch, newspaper's savior is here, if you can access the paper from the web, and the web is in your pocket, perhaps newspaper companies can find a way to adapt media with new technology rather than forcing technology to work with old media. If editors and journalists can find a way to adapt with the ever changing technology, the newspaper still may have a fighting chance.


The i-Pod moment has arrived for newspapers

Tuesday, February 26, 2008

FOX News: Condeming Our Patriots

On January 26, serving as a guest on Fox News, TV talk show host Montel Williams bashed all the media outlets and Fox News for all the attention on a single death previously in the week rather than the continuously mounting deaths in Iraq.

Heath Ledger had passed away on the 22 of January and as Montel Williams was introduced onto the show, the commentators for Fox where discussing this tragedy. Upon Williams introduction he was asked to express his feeling on the actor's passing. After briefly sending out his condolences to the family he went on a 3 minute tangent bashing the networks lack of coverage on the 28 deaths that have occurred in Iraq since January 1 and more on the untimely death of a young actor.

One of the hosts cut Mr. Williams off to break for a commercial, stating "We will have more with Montel in just a moment." Following the break, Williams was no where to be found on the set and four days later he was cut from his job as host of "The Montel Williams Show" after 17 years. Fox had decided sealed the deal for Montel and his show when they opted not to renew for the 2008-2009 season.

Williams may have known this before airing his distaste for the collective media outlets in America or maybe the comments pushed him out the door. What ever the case Montel Williams has done something that I have seen very few celebrities and even fewer TV personalities do, voice thier disgust for all the mindless media coverage in America when we have soldiers dying for the democracy we enjoy every day.

Williams had served in the the U.S. Marine Corps and Navy for 22 years, reaching the level of Lieutenant and serving on the USS Sampson during the U.S. invasion of Grenada. Williams should be respected and feel proud for what he said backing this nations soldiers while most the media wants to cover mindless incidents involving the ridiculously rich young stars of America and not the selfless hearts of America fighting in the trenches.

YouTube Video: Montel turns the tables on a Fox Morning Television show

Montel Williams Loses Job after Defending Troops on Fox News

Tuesday, February 19, 2008

Out of the Kitchen and Into the Newsroom

Big news continues to pour out of the Middle East with freedoms for women, thought absurd 10 years ago, as women are pushing their way into the newsrooms and given the respect a true journalist deserves.

Sabria Jawhar, a female journalist from the Saudi Gazette, who wears a veil reveling only her eyes, was allowed into a Saudi Foreign press conference and given the honors by the minister to not only speak but asked the first and last questions during the conference. Along with women being allowed, at the Um al-Qora public university, to begin taking media and international relations courses, winds of change seem to abroad for women journalists in Saudi Arabia.

There are many problems still surrounding females in news reporting in Saudi Arabia, such as being advised to write using pseudonyms or not being allowed into editing rooms, this shows major progress into women's rights in the Middle East.

With a group of recommendations being given to better describe what the women's career ladder looks like in journalism, removing obstacles preventing women from being in journalism, and putting laws in place to better protect Saudi women, it is beginning to look like Americanization is starting to take off even in these, thought to be lost of all hope, Middle Eastern countries.

For women to begin receiving these privileges in Saudi Arabia that women in America have been granted for decades, great strides have been made and are still being made for Saudi women and hopefully that can catch on and women will be given their due respects that should be granted for hard work and dedication and they won't have to follow five steps behind their husbands anymore.

Saudi Women Journalists Are Coming Out Of The Closet

Tuesday, February 12, 2008

Mainstream America vs. Corporate Media

Time Warner, Disney, Bertelsmann, Viacom and Rupert Murdoch's NewsCorp. are the five media giants who control what American's see daily on there news reports and controls most of what the globe sees when it tunes into the news.

The Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting (FAIR) organization has stated that our nations "Mainstream Media" is a far cry from what "Mainstream America" feels and believes. In fact they have even dubbed our media friends (found far to the right) as "Corporate Media."

While a Republican congress of the 1920's enacted the Fairness Doctrine for clean, middle of the road reporting, allowing for the American public be able to generate their own opinions, today's "Corporate Media" will only show us what they want us to know and then inform us or persuade us with one-sided reporting to believe a certain way about an issue.

Thankfully with websites just like this one, Blogger.com, a new media outlet has been created to allow for individuals or smaller organizations to get there voice heard without buying up seven television stations, building theme parks around the world or publishing books to generate more revenue to dominate globally.

While the "War on Terrorism" is pushing so tirelessly forward and Global Warming tugs on the heart strings of so many Americans, I turn on my TV in the morning to a aerial shot of Britney Spears house after she gets sent to rehab or I open up the paper and read about Barron Hilton, Paris' younger brother, not having a drivers license, maybe Thomas Jefferson's "eternal vigilance" will live on through the internet to help true middle of the road, Mainstream Media persevere.


There's Nothing Mainstream About the Corporate Media

Tuesday, February 5, 2008

Freedom of Press Not for Everyone

Since the US's invasion of Iraq in 2003, 174 journalists and media support staffers have been executed, with one journalist sitting on death row in Iran.

In the Arab nations of Iran, Iraq, Egypt, Syria, Yemen among others the freedom to write what you feel or bring up certain issues or policies worth question can get you incarcerated, tortured or killed.

There are periodic, unexpected crackdowns throughout the media outlets in the Middle East that prevent news worthy topics making it to the general population. While there are several independent media outlets in the Middle East, many succumb to self-censorship for fear of being a target by the political leaders of their respective countries.

With Iran ranking fourth in 2007 for arresting journalist, Iraq remains the most dangerous place to be reporting the news for the fifth year straight, and Israel has been known to use tear gas and stun-grenades to subdue editors and reporters.

While we in America may moan and groan that some issues do not make it to the national stage to become issues that we may attempt to change, journalists in Egypt can not question the health of 79 year-old president Hosni Mubarak with out backlash, as one journalist faces charges for even raising concern of the issue.

Mideast nations tighten media controls

Tuesday, January 29, 2008

FOX: All Your Sports AND Political Needs In One Place

The biggest Sunday of the year is quickly approaching us and through the midst of a Brady/Moss v. Manning/Burress battle we also have a Obama v. Clinton v. Romney slugfest before us. While many of us will be tuning into FOX for all of our Super Bowl Sunday needs, we may just stumble upon some heated presidential debates several hours before kick-off.

Super Tuesday is just a week out and two days after Super Sunday so FOX has come up with a way to capitalize off of both events. Starting at 9 A.M., host Chris Wallace will begin to breakdown the presidential elections through the next 22 states as well as talk tactics about the big game in Phoenix that night.

Always count on NewsCorp. and Rupert Murdoch to know how to take advantage of every situation and bring in record viewers as well as hopefully spark some interest in sports for the political viewers and vice versa. All the sports fans out there know Keith Olberman from his days with ESPN and CBS will also be on hand to share his opinions on the two big face offs in the coming week.

So for all your sporting and political needs this week all you need is FOX. Tune in at 9 AM Sunday morning for a day that will kick-off with one-hour of Fox News Sunday and end with crowning this years Super Bowl Champions in Phoenix, AZ.


Fox Mashes Up the Supers

Tuesday, January 22, 2008

MySpace: Changing With the Times

Many of us look at Myspace.com as either some teenagers lack of a life or some 40 year old perverts way into a 13 year olds bedroom but as of late Chief Exectuive Chis DeWolf and media mogul Rupert Murdoch have been looking on how to expand Myspace as many sites such a Facebook have become serious rivals.

Murdoch's NewsCorp. purchased Myspace.com in 2005 for $580 million and has been growing and expanding ever since. Efforts to counter rivals such as Facebook have been creating its own music label and signing up and coming bands, as well as changing its homepage to a more useful portal to the web like Yahoo or AOL. They have also added applications such as Myspace TV and Myspace IM to bring in other demographics to add to the 110 million monthly users already signed up to Myspace.

Many advertisers are looking towards Facebook this last year due to many lude and explicit profiles have been created on Myspace, spreading spam and much stress to everyday users but it is still anticipated that Myspace will have an $800 million in revenue in just advertising in the coming year. DeWolf and Myspace co-founder Tom Anderson have been kept on at NewsCorp. as the main controllers over Myspace and have been maintaining the site and adding new features for safety and privacy to keep advertisers and bring in new investors to the site.

While Myspace may have many rivals attempting to dethrone them as America's most viewed website, they have managed to extend their reach into 15 new countries in the last year and are continually adding new features to keep up with Murdoch's demands for success as well as trying to appease new users and continuing to please the "old-school Myspacer's".

From Myspace to Yourspace

Monday, January 14, 2008

Glenn Beck Reaches Hundreds of Thousands

Whats more about media than when one media outlet uses another to spread an important issue.

If you do not know who Glenn Beck is, your are sure to either see his story on Facebook, YouTube and even Good Morning America. Beck created a video on his page, GlennBeck.com, about a recent outpatient procedure that turned into a 5 day stint at the hospital.

Beck posted this video and now it is on every video site from YouTube to Facebook. How better of a way to create a global voice than by multiple websites uploading this video to their sites, other people get to view it, word of mouth spreads the story and before you know it USA Today has articles on it.

That is how mass media begins to work for itself in todays day and age of technology and the surrounding problems of the internet taking away from other forms of media.

Glenn Beck Video: Beck from the Dead

Original Story

Thursday, January 10, 2008

First time for everything

Well I never anticipated that I would ever write a blog but now in Writing for Mass Communicatins, Prof. Blade has had us create our own blog. So here is my first blog and I hope to have some insightful points of view.