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Portrayals of women in popular media

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Title: Portrayals of women in popular media


1
Portrayals of women in popular media
  • Content and effects

2
NOW analysis of 2002 primetime
1. Gender Composition and Diversity Analysts
provided a tally of lead, supporting and guest
characters by gender and race, with notation of
positive role models and negative stereotypes
among women and people of color.
3
  • 2. Violence Analysts recorded the number and
    type of violent, threatening or hostile acts,
    also noting the gender of the victims and an
    interpretation of whether the presentation of
    violence was gratuitous or integral to the story.

4
  • 3. Sexual Exploitation Analysts noted how the
    male and female characters interacted and whether
    women/girls were respected and valued
    participants in the storyline, existed primarily
    as sex objects to seduce/complement the male
    characters, or were peripheral to the action
    driving the plot.

5
  • 4. Social Responsibility Analysts commented on
    the relevance of subject matter to everyday
    people's lives.
  • Shows were examined for attention to issues such
    as economics, childcare and birth control the
    consequences of characters' actions and the
    inclusion of characters of varying age, size,
    sexual orientation, ability, marital status,
    religion, etc.

6
  • In the third year of producing the Watch Out,
    Listen Up! report, our field analysts observed a
    continued lack of gender and racial diversity on
    TV. Outdated and negative stereotypes were common
    where diversity did exist.
  • In our official tally, the six broadcast networks
    employed 134 more men than women in regular
    primetime roles.
  • Programs told from a male point-of-view
    outnumbered those with a female point-of-view
    more than two-to-one.

7
  • The gap between shows that portray female
    characters with dignity and respect, and programs
    that sexually exploit women appears to have
    widened. On one end of the spectrum the networks
    give us Judging Amy, Law Order and The West
    Wing where women are smart, resourceful and in
    charge. Way on the other end of that spectrum,
    the networks offer Fear Factor, The Bachelor, WWE
    Smackdown! and The Drew Carey Show where women
    exist to be ogled, used and demeaned.

8
  • If you are a middle-aged woman, a lesbian, a
    Latina, a woman with a disability, a woman of
    size, a low-income mom struggling to get by . . .
    good luck finding programming that even pretends
    to reflect your life.

9
  • Media Tenor (www.mediatenor.com) looked at the
    evening news programs on CBS, ABC and NBC to
    determine the percentage of female protagonists
    in news stories in 2002.

10
  • All three programs came in with an average
    percentage of 14 female protagonists, compared
    to 86 males. There were no significant
    differences among the networks in this regard.
    National Security Advisor Condoleeza Rice led the
    top 10 with 45 appearances, followed by Senator
    Hillary Clinton (27) and the First Lady, Laura
    Bush (20). It took EPA Administrator Christine
    Todd Whitman a mere three appearances to make it
    into the top 10.

11
  • The picture looks even worse considering the
    issues about which the top female protagonists
    were consulted or to which they were connected In
    the context of the top issues, foreign affairs,
    out of 4,234 appearances of individuals, only 208
    were women, an equally low 5 on all three
    networks.

12
  • Similarly, out of 1845 individual appearances in
    the context of political issues, women appeared
    only 115 times. In fact, the only top five issues
    in which women consistently beat the network
    average of 14 were crime (often as victims) and,
    surprisingly, business -- though with a 21
    share, women in this context are still far from
    achieving parity.

13
Longitudinal Analysis of Gender in Network
Commercials How Advertisers Portray Gender
  • The researchers videotaped 21-hour constructed
    week primetime samples (Sunday through Saturday)
    for each network from 700 -1000 p.m. CDT in
    1998, 1999, and 2000. In 1998 the sample included
    ABC, CBS and NBC in 1999 the sample was ABC,
    FOX and in 2000, it was ABC, NBC, CBS and FOX. A
    total of 189 hours of television programming was
    collected during the February "sweeps" rating
    period each year.

14
  • Age is as misrepresented in primetime, network
    commercials as gender. . . .After 51 years of
    age, when a person has generally achieved
    financial security and independence, both genders
    were disregarded as target prospects by
    advertisers.

15
  • This study confirmed earlier studies' findings
    that the male voice is overwhelmingly the voice
    of authority in most commercials. We now know
    this is also true of commercials for
    traditionally female products. Perhaps it
    shouldn't have been surprising that male voices
    were also featured in longer commercials, while
    female voices were relegated to shorter
    commercials, but it was. Simply, women were
    usually featured in shorter commercials both as
    characters and voice-overs.

16
Employment in broadcast media
  • The latest figures from the 2003 RTNDA/Ball State
    University Annual Survey of women and minorities
    show that although the number of minorities
    working in local radio and television news rose
    slightly last year, the percentage of minorities
    dropped. At the same time, the number of women
    news directors and the percentage of women in the
    workforce have grown in television newsrooms.

17
  • According to the survey, minorities now comprise
    18.1 percent of local television news staffs,
    down from 20.6 percent last year. In local radio,
    minorities hold 6.5 percent of the jobs, down
    from 8 percent. Because the overall number of
    employees is up this year, the number of
    minorities in TV newsrooms actually rose, but did
    not keep up percentage-wise. Bob Papper of Ball
    State University, who conducted the study for the
    Radio-Television News Directors Association,
    reports that the number of minorities working in
    local broadcast newsrooms rose by about 60 jobs
    overall.

18
  • Women are gradually increasing their
    representation in TV news management, holding a
    record 26.5 percent of the news director jobs
    women hold 39.3 percent of all television news
    jobs
  • In radio, women hold 14.4 percent of the news
    director slots and constitute 24 percent of the
    workforce.

19
Lifetime and WE channels
  • An examination of scheduling was conducted for
    both channels during two weeks in October
    (October 7 through October 13 and October 21
    through October 27) and one week in November
    (November 4 through November 10) 2002. All the
    programs that aired during this three-week period
    were included, with the exception of paid
    programming.

20
  • Genre The groups in this category included
    drama, comedy, talk, contest and
    documentary/reality. These labels cover the
    different genres available on entertainment
    television.
  • Primary theme The options here were romance,
    family, physical appearance, fashion/style,
    victimization and other (a non-stereotypical
    theme).

21
Women's Role in Popular Video Games Stripped
Down and Killed Off
  • The National Institute on Media and the Family, a
    leading resource on the effects of video games on
    children, released its Seventh Annual MediaWise
    Video Game Report Card in December in Washington,
    D.C.
  • The Seventh Annual MediaWise Video Game Report
    Card gave its first ever overall failing grade.
    Areas of special concern include
  • violence against women
  • growing levels of video game addiction
  • inaccuracy of ratings
  • parental lack of awareness regarding content
  • and the failure of many retailers to restrict
    children from mature-rated games.
  • The MediaWise Video Game Report Card also
    analyzes recent research, showing that violent
    video games are linked to aggressive, violent
    behavior.

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Women working in entertainment
  • Men wrote and created approximately 8 of 10
    situation comedies and dramas airing on the
    broadcast networks in the 2001-2002 prime-time
    season.
  • Overall, women constituted 23 of all creators,
    executive producers, directors, writers, editors
    and directors of photography. This percentage has
    remained virtually unchanged for three seasons.

28
  • However, the representation of women writers
    declined from 27 in 2000-2001 to 19 in
    2001-2002.
  • Source Martha Lauzen
  • Boxed In Women on Screen and Behind the Scenes
    in Prime-Time TV

29
Women in entertainment industry
(Glascock, 2001)
30
Network News Women Less Than a Fifth of Sources
Quoted Most Often as 'Ordinary Citizens'
  • Media Tenor Ltd. (www.mediatenor.com), a media
    analysis firm, in its study of U.S. network
    newscasts in 2001, found women at the margins of
    public debate.
  • For each report on ABC World News Tonight, NBC
    Nightly News and CBS Evening News, Media Tenor
    coded the topic, time period, location,
    personalities involved and source information
    (including gender, among other characteristics).
    Media Tenor profiled 14,632 sources in 18,765
    individual reports airing between January 1 and
    December 31.

31
  • In general, the analysis showed that selection of
    sources favored "elite interests" prominent
    politicians, particularly those in the current
    political administration, and persons with
    considerable economic influence.
  • In terms of gender representation of sources,
    women were 19 of total sources. However, they
    accounted for 40 of "ordinary citizens" quoted,
    indicating that they were less likely to be
    contacted for expert opinion.

32
Cultural Indicators
33
Primetime, 1969-1985
34
Primetime, 1990-1998
35
Gender-typed jobs, 1990-1998
36
Primetime, 1969-1985
37
Marriage patterns, major characters, primetime
1969-1985
38
Domestic responsibilities
39
Sexual orientation
40
Romantic involvement
41
  • Overall, Lifetime and WE used stereotypical
    approaches to target their audience a majority of
    the time. Lifetime devoted 76.3 percent of its
    three weeks of programming to stereotypical
    "women's themes." Meanwhile, 71.5 percent of WE's
    programs over a three-week period focused on
    stereotypical issues.
  • WE focused heavily on romance. The final total
    for programs featuring romantic themes was 53.9
    percent. In other words, more than half of WE's
    programming revolved around romance of some kind
    (primarily heterosexual romance).

42
  • Lifetime, in comparison, spent 17.3 percent of
    its time on romance. Furthermore, many of WE's
    program descriptions began with the romantic part
    of a program (in other words, featured it as the
    most important focus), using phrases like
    "romance blooms," "love blossoms," etc.
  • Lifetime's primary focus was victimization, which
    served as a theme for 35.6 percent of its
    programs. In contrast, WE focused on
    victimization for only 1.6 percent of its
    programs. Furthermore, many of Lifetime's
    original dramatic movies focused solely on
    victimization, with titles such as A Murderous
    Affair, With Harmful Intent and Stalking Back.

43
NOW analysis, 2001-2002 2002-2003 primetime
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