Political Science
Textbooks
Boundless Political Science
Public Opinion
Forming Public Opinion
Political Science Textbooks Boundless Political Science Public Opinion Forming Public Opinion
Political Science Textbooks Boundless Political Science Public Opinion
Political Science Textbooks Boundless Political Science
Political Science Textbooks
Political Science
Concept Version 7
Created by Boundless

The Mass Media

Media can have an important affect on public opinion in several ways.

Learning Objective

  • Explain the different ways that the mass media forms public opinion


Key Points

    • Mass media frame the details of the story.
    • Mass media communicate the social desirability of certain ideas.
    • Mass media sets the news agenda, which shapes the public's views on what is newsworthy and important.
    • Increasing scandal coverage, as well as profit-motivated sensationalist media coverage, has resulted in young people holding more negative, distrustful views of government than previous generations.

Terms

  • mass media

    The mass media are media technologies like broadcast media and print media that are designed to reach a large audience by mass communication.

  • framing

    the construction and presentation of a fact or issue "framed" from a particular perspective


Full Text

Mass media effects on public opinion

Media can have an important affect on public opinion in several ways.

  1. Setting the news agenda, which shapes the public's views on what is newsworthy and important
  2. Framing the details of a story
  3. Communicating the social desirability of certain kinds of ideas

The formation of public opinion starts with agenda setting by major media outlets throughout the world. This agenda setting dictates what is newsworthy and how and when it will be reported. The media agenda is set by a variety of different environmental and newswork factors that determines which stories will be newsworthy.

Another key component in the formation of public opinion is framing. Framing is when a story or piece of news is portrayed in a particular way and is meant to sway the consumers attitude one way or the other. Most political issues are heavily framed in order to persuade voters to vote for a particular candidate. For example, if Candidate X once voted on a bill that raised income taxes on the middle class, a framing headline would read "Candidate X Doesn't Care About the Middle Class". This puts Candidate X in a negative frame to the news reader.

Social desirability is another key component to the formation of public opinion. Social desirability is the idea that people in general will form their opinions based on what they believe is the popular opinion. Based on media agenda setting and media framing, most often a particular opinion gets repeated throughout various news mediums and social networking sites, until it creates a false vision where the perceived truth is actually very far away from the actual truth.

Public opinion can be influenced by public relations and the political media. Additionally, mass media utilizes a wide variety of advertising techniques to get their message out and change the minds of people. Since the 1950s, television has been the main medium for molding public opinion, though the internet is becoming increasingly important in this realm.

News Media

Increasing exposure to news media has both a positive and negative effects on the formation of political values in young people.

[ edit ]
Edit this content
Prev Concept
Family, Peers, Church, and School
Political Leaders and Opinion Makers
Next Concept
Subjects
  • Accounting
  • Algebra
  • Art History
  • Biology
  • Business
  • Calculus
  • Chemistry
  • Communications
  • Economics
  • Finance
  • Management
  • Marketing
  • Microbiology
  • Physics
  • Physiology
  • Political Science
  • Psychology
  • Sociology
  • Statistics
  • U.S. History
  • World History
  • Writing

Except where noted, content and user contributions on this site are licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0 with attribution required.