Socrates

"The only true wisdom is in knowing you know nothing." 

Socrates

"To find yourself, think for yourself."

Nelson Mandela

"Education is the most powerful weapon which you can use to change the world."

Jim Rohn

"Success is nothing more than a few simple disciplines, practiced every day." 

Buddha

"The mind is everything. What you think, you become." 

Sunday, 22 March 2015

Media Culture and Society-Revision

1.     The head quarter of press information bureau in located at
a)     Mumbai
b)    New Delhi
c)     Bangaluru
d)    Chennai
2.     Which country publishes maximum number of dailies in the world
a)     Japan
b)    USA
c)     India
d)    UK
3.     SS Vasan of Tamilnadu started a periodical in 192 was
a)     Ananda Vikadan
b)    Anand Sahitya
c)     Ananda Murti
d)    Ananda Bazar Patrika
4.     SITE is experiment on
a)     Communication
b)    Environment
c)     Agriculture
d)    Rural development
5.     S. Kasturiranga Iyengar a lawyer become the editor of ….
a)     The Hindu
b)    Dinamalar
c)     Dinamani
d)    Thanthi
6.     The first multilingual TV network of India was
a)     Jain
b)    Zee
c)     Geminy
d)    Surya
7.     ESPN is a channel owned by
a)     Star Group
b)    CNN Group
c)     Zee
8.     When was the first Television transmission introduced in India?
a)     September , 1959 in Delhi,
b)    January 1963 Delhi
c)     November  1958 Mumbai
d)    August 1949 Kolkata

9.     When was colour TV transmission started in India
a)     1982
b)    1980
c)     1986
d)    1979
10.                        Advertising agencies Association of India was established in
a)     1945
b)    1942
c)     1950
d)    1990
11.                        the knowledge skills and competencies that are required in order to use and interpret the media.
a)     Media literacy 
b)    Media communication
c)     Media Mobilization
d)    Information load
12.                        British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) began the first television service of the world in
a)     1936
b)    1945
c)     1885
d)    1990
13.                        The households (out of total 223 million) in India who own a television…………..is.
a)     138 million
b)    100 milion
c)      22 million
d)    200 million
 The process of  combining the functions of two or three devices into one mechanism.called as
a)     Device Convergence,
b)    Operational Convergence 
c)     Corporate Convergence
14.                        Agenda setting  effects are founded by ………….. in the 1970s. 
a)     Maxwell McCombs and Donald Shaw
b)    Lasswell
c)     Marshall
d)    Mc Quail

15.                        ………………..means division of society into different strata or layers.
a)     Social stratification
b)    Cultural diffusion
c)     Cultural diversity
d)     

2 Mark questions

1.     What is facing ‘3 R’ challenges faced by Doordarshan ?
2.     What are the types of  Surveillance ?
3.     Definition of society.
4.     What you mean by Socialization?
5.     Define Mass Media.
6.     Write short notes on Cultural Diffusion

7.     Differentiate high culture and low culture.

8.     What it mean Disintermediation?
9.     What you mean by Media Framing? 
10.      What is mean by Convergence?
11.      What is the meaning of Counter framing?
12.      Define Agenda Setting
13.      Who is A “gate keeper” in a media firm?

14.      What is the Meaning of Culture?

15.      Write about Social stratification.

16.      What is the need of media education?
17.      There are three different forms of cultural diffusion.
18.      Define Urban society.
19.      Web.2.0
20.      What you mean by media saturation?
21.      What is information management?
22.      What you mean by Visual communication?
23.      What it mean media Oligoply? 
24.      Meaning of  Media Conglomerate.
25.      What is the Stereotypes effects of media?
26.      What is the effects of Evil of “paid news”?
27.      What you mean by MIS?

 6       marks questions


1.     Major Features of Rural Society
2.     What is the difference between unban and rural society?
3.     What is the  power of the media?
4.     What is the  types of Media effects?
5.     What are the way Media control possible?
6.     What are TV comedy formats?
7.     What is ‘uses and gratifications’? How we can  classified  into a four-category?
8.     ‘Media as a conscious industry’. Explain
9.     How not to study media?
10.            What is the difference between Framing and the agenda setting
11.            What you mean by media Framing? Write the types of framing?
12.            What is the techniques of media framing?
13.            What is the Characteristics of Culture?
14.            What is the Characteristics of  Social stratification ?
15.            What is the Characteristics of the Family
16.            What is the importance of media education in a democratic country?
17.            What are the Media effects?
18.            What the critical issues in Advertising?
19.            Why people use the media?
20.            What is the importance of Visual Communication?
21.            How media controlled by state law?
22.            What is the economy of motion picture industry?
23.            What you mean by agenda setting? How it differ from framing of media?
24.            Who owns the mass media in India?
25.            What is the Indian Media market features?
26.            What is the role of the media in socialization?
27.            How media Shape the Attitudes, Perceptions, and Beliefs of a society?
28.                  ‘The Media as a Primary Source of Information’. Justify.
28.      How news media outlets frame stories.
29.      What is the need of media literacy?
30.      What you mean by Convergence? What are the types of convergence in media?
31.      What is the principles of information management?
32.      What is the duties of Information system professionals?
33.      Who are media determinants?
34.      What is the uses of cell phone? What are the characterstics?



Essay Questions

29.            What is the Major Programming Trends of Indian Television?
30.            What is the function of media?
31.            Culture is a Learned Behaviour:How?
32.            How People Use the Mass Media?
33.            Write in detail about the Indian media owners as poitical party.
34.            What is the economy of motion picture?
35.            What are the forms of diversity in india?
36.            Explain in detail Media ownership trends in India?
37.            Characteristics of Traditional Mass Media Organization:
38.            What is the Modern Mass Media Emerging Trends?
39.            What are the types of Social Stratification?
40.            What you mean by Social stratification ? Write in detail according to class stratification?
41.            What are the factors influenced the media? 
42.            What is the institutional structure of motion picture industry?
43.            What are the Characteristics of Traditional Mass Media Organization?
44.            What is the function of media on society?
45.            What  you mean by audience  What are the types of audience?
46.            What are the  salient aspects about media ownership ?

 



Tuesday, 17 March 2015

Critical Issues in Advertising

Advertising as a profession came of age in the twentieth century, facilitating the shift of. society from production-oriented small-town values to consumer-oriented urban lifestyles. With its ability to create consumers, advertising became the central economic support system for our mass media industries. Through its seemingly endless supply of pervasive and persua­sive strategies, advertising today saturates the cultural landscape.

Products now blend in as props or even as "characters" in TV shows and movies. In addition, almost every national con­sumer product now has its own Web site to market itself to a global audience 365 days a year.

Advertising was manipulating helpless consumers, attacking our dignity, and invading "the privacy of our minds.  The advertising industry was all-powerful.  Although consumers have historically been regarded as dupes by many critics.   Some of the most serious concerns involve children, teens, and health.

Children and Advertising
Children and teenagers, living in a culture dominated by TV ads, are often viewed as "consumer  .  In addition, parent groups have worried about the heavy promotion of products like sugar­coated cereals during children's programs.  they are increasingly targeted by advertisers.  In addition, very young children cannot distinguish between a commercial and the TV program that the ad interrupts


Stereotyping commercials

Commercials are the vast source of gender stereotyping. The aim of the modern commercial is not only the satisfaction of needs but also their creation. Women are more often presented in commercials, because they are seen as responsible for making everyday purchases. Men generally advertise cars, cigarettes, business products or investments, whereas  women are shown rather in the commercials with cosmetics and domestic products. They are also more likely portrayed in the home environment, unlike men, who are shown outdoors. Another important distinction is the phenomenon in  the commercials, which consists in showing the entire figure in case of women and close-up shots in case of men . 
Health and Advertising
Eating Disorders. 
Advertising has a powerful impact on the standards of beauty in our culture. A long-standing trend in advertising is the association of certain products with ultra thin female models, promoting a style of "attractiveness" that girls and women are invited to follow.  Even today, despite the popularity of fit­ness programs, most fashion models are much thinner than the average woman.  Some forms of fashion and cosmetics advertising actually pander to individuals' insecurities and low self-esteem by promising the ideal body. Such advertising suggests standards of style and behavior that may be not only unattainable but also harmful, leading to eating disorders such as anorexia and bulimia and an increase in cosmetic surgeries.
.
Puffery and Deception
 false and misleading claims have haunted advertising. . A cer­tain amount of puffery—ads featuring hyperbole and exaggeration—has usually been permitted, particu­larly when a product says it is "new and improved." However, ads become deceptive when they are likely to mislead reasonable consumers based on statements in the ad or because they omit information. Moreover, when a product claims to be "the best," "the great­est," or "preferred by four out of five doctors,
A typical example of deceptive advertising is the Campbell Soup ad in which marbles in the bottom of a soup bowl forced more bulky ingredients—and less water—to the surface. In another instance, a 1990
Excessive Commercialism
DECEPTIVE ADVERTISING – FALSE CLAIMS
Fair & Lovely Foundation  The stereotypical role of women in Indian society as  portrait by the company in its ads still encourages anachronistic beliefs , the company still manages to allure people to buy its products by saying that it contains some miraculous scientific formula which would turn their skin white , the company is still misleading people and society by depicting that when a dark – skinned lass uses fair and lovely , she moves towards success thereby making them believe that light skin is a pre- requisite for a fortunate career.

Advertising's Role in Politics

Bharatiya Janata Party leader Narendra Modi's election juggernaut in the 2014 Lok Sabha polls is an example of howto prepare and successfully implement a marketing and branding campaign. Irrespective of your faith, ideology and voting decision, there has been no escaping Mod

Since the 1950s, political consultants have been imitating market-research and advertising techniques to sell their candidates. To  giving rise to political advertising, the   use of ad techniques to promote a candidate's image and persuade the public to adopt a particular viewpoint.  

Advertising agencies Soho Square, Ogilvy and Mather, and media buying agency Madison World—the media team that helped  Narendra Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) sweep to power in the Lok Sabha elections with the biggest election victory in 30 years— have delivered once again with the party set to form governments in Haryana and Maharashtra, where assembly elections were held earlier this month. The BJP’s focus during the elections was on governance, growth and corruption during the 15-year rule by the Congress and the Nationalist Congress Party (NCP) coalition in Maharashtra. With an advertising budget of Rs.25 crore and brand Modi still going strong, the odds were in the BJP’s favour.
http://businesstoday.intoday.in/story/case-study-strategy-tactics-behind-creation-of-brand-narendra-modi/1/206321.html
he BJP’s focus during the elections was on governance, growth and corruption during the 15-year rule by the Congress and the Nationalist Congress Party (NCP) coalition in Maharashtra. With an advertising budget of Rs.25 crore and brand Modi still going strong, the odds were in the BJP’s favour.

The creative backbone of the party’s campaign was Piyush Pandey, executive chairman and creative director for South Asia at Ogilvy and Mather.

he party had arranged for 20,000 digital vans to show Modi’s speeches in rural areas of the two states. “The idea was to reach the areas which do not have much access to newspaper and television so that people know about the message of Prime Minister Narendra Modi through these speeches,” said a senior BJP leader, who declined to be named.

We rounded off the campaign on the last day with an ad on the last page of The Times of India highlighting the admission of corruption by the Congress chief minister himself,” said Balsara—his reference is to an interview given by Chavan to The Telegraph where he claimed that he couldn’t act against his corrupt predecessors and partners due to political compulsions.



The BJP spent Rs.25 crore on the advertisement campaigns in Haryana and Maharashtra including Rs.50 lakh for the telecast of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Madison Square garden speech which was aired on seven Marathi television channels.