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What are Alternative Media

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Coders visited each site 4 times. Secondary coder checked reliability ... Exception: Drudge, National Review, Slate. 80% advocated liberalized social change ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: What are Alternative Media


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2
What are Alternative Media?
  • Formerly the dissident press
  • Anyone can be a publisher
  • Heavy use by Generation Y

3
Why Study Alternative Media?
  • Increased consumer preference
  • Influence on socio-cultural views
  • Political effect

4
Sampling Frame How Derived?
  • Recommendation by Chris Atton
  • Newspaper / Magazine reviews
  • Current-event-oriented agencies
  • Longevity relative popularity

5
Sites Evaluated
  • www.alternet.org
  • http//counterpunch.com
  • www.dailykos.com
  • www.drudgereport.com
  • www.indymedia.org
  • www.instapundit.com

6
Sites Evaluated
  • www.mediachannel.org
  • www.motherjones.com
  • www.moveon.org
  • www.nationalreview.com
  • www.oneworld.net
  • www.papertiger.org

7
Sites Evaluated
  • www.progressive.com
  • www.rense.com
  • www.schnews.org.uk
  • http//slate.msn.com
  • www.squall.co.uk
  • www.villagevoice.com

8
Procedures
  • Content analysis of 18 Alt Media sites
  • Timeframe June 7 June 19, 2004
  • Unit of analysis Entire site w/index focus
  • Coders visited each site 4 times
  • Secondary coder checked reliability
  • Most variables coded on 7-point Likert scale
  • Analyses performed with SPSS software

9
Assessment Difficulties
  • Alt Media defy easy classification
  • Revenue circulation goals differ
  • Non-traditional marketing
  • Difficulty applying quantitative measures

10
Key Variables
  • Self-presentation
  • Political Ideology
  • Journalistic Diversity Objectivity
  • Degree of Professionalism
  • Use of graphics
  • Update schedule
  • Iraqi War / President Bush / Reagan death

11
Results
  • 78 do not self-brand as radical / extreme
  • Almost all sites were irreverent of existing
    social order, using punditry humor
  • Exception OneWorld.net
  • Revenue generation greatly varied
  • Non-advertiser supported liberal
  • Most sites were liberal in tone
  • Exception Drudge, National Review, Slate

12
Results
  • 80 advocated liberalized social change
  • Traditional editorial objectivity - LOW
  • 4 sites had responsible fact-sourcing
  • The most non-objective produced with
    horizontal production model
  • Non-advertiser supported liberal
  • Mostly anti-big-media
  • Most are polarizing not uniting

13
War in Iraq
  • Half of the sites featured news, information
    opinion on Iraqi War
  • Info usually atop Index page / very visible
  • Most werent concerned with hourly news

14
War Views vs. Editorial Diversity
15
Bush-bashing
  • All but 5 sites engaged in Bush-bashing
  • Notable MoveOn.org
  • 13 of 18 sites proffered no alternative
    candidate or preferred party stance
  • 14 sites Anybody but Bush

16
Bush-bashing
Source Rense.com
17
Bush-bashing
Source Squall.co.uk
18
Bush-bashing
  • When used as a dependent variable in a one-way
    ANOVABush-bashing largely explained by
  • Sites anti-war sentiment (p
  • Liberalness of political rhetoric (p

19
Conclusions
  • Whats the alternative?
  • Eager to change societyfew state how
  • Quick to differentiate themselves from
    traditional media
  • Strive to embolden social consciousness
  • Demographics of new media users suggests the
    importance of alt media
  • Future research End user effects

20
Semantic Touchstones
Vitriolic
Indulgent
Insurgent
Activist
Adversarial
Cynical
Anti-sites
Resistance
Anti-Partisan
Provocative Rhetoric to Sting
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