The Media MonopolyIn this critique of corporate media control, Ben Bagdikian examines the effect of corporate ownership and advertising on mass media in the United States. He documents the continuing decline in the number of firms dominating production of newspapers, magizines, books, television and movies in the U.S. He also discusses the emerging corporate control of alternative media outlets such as cable television, syndicated programming and videocassettes, and shows how the recession, corporate takovers and lax antitrust policies have affected news reporting in the 1980s. |
Contents
The Endless Chain | 3 |
PART 2 THE HIGH COST OF FREE ADVERTISING | 6 |
From Mythology to Theology | 67 |
Copyright | |
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Allen Neuharth American newspaper audience become book publishing bought broadcast stations cable candidate circulation cities Columbia Journalism Review commercial competition conglomerate consumer cost country's created daily newspapers daily papers dominant economic Editor & Publisher Electric executives Exxon favor Frank Gannett Frank Munsey Gannett Company Gannett papers giants Hearst ideas industry interests journalists large corporations largest magazines major advertisers major media mass advertising mass media McCaleb media corporations media firms media power ment million Mobil monopoly movie networks Neuharth newspaper chain Nixon oil companies operations owners ownership pany Paramount Communications percent political president printed Procter & Gamble profits programs radio rates readers reported revenues Richard Nixon Roby Sarnoff sell social standard stories television stations tion United Wall Street Journal Warner Washington William Allen White York Yorker