Who wants to be a millionaire? How the press framed the role of the public in the dispute between time Warner cable and Disney's ABC network in may 2000

N. Kaneva, Edward Lenert
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

At midnight on May 1, 2000, Time Warner Cable dropped the signal of Disney's ABC network from its systems in seven major markets. The signal was unavailable for approximately 39 hours, affecting roughly 3.5 million subscribers. While lawyers and regulators pondered the retransmission consent provisions of the Cable Act of 1992 and the accompanying FCC rules, the press was called upon to report and interpret these issues to the public. This paper examines the frames present in journalistic accounts triggered by the loss of ABC's signal in five mass newspapers and five trade publications. Specifically, the paper addresses the question: How did the press portray the role of the public in relation to the Time Warner ‐ Disney dispute? The data presented in the paper strongly suggest that the press failed to develop a cogent discussion of the underlying policy issues in a way useful to the public. The analysis of the press coverage concludes that the public was framed as passive and was largely excluded from the policy debate around the dispute.
谁想成为百万富翁?2000年5月,在时代华纳有线电视与迪士尼旗下ABC网络的纠纷中,媒体是如何塑造公众角色的
2000年5月1日午夜,时代华纳有线从七个主要市场的系统中撤下了迪士尼ABC网络的信号。信号中断了大约39个小时,影响了大约350万用户。当律师和监管机构考虑1992年《有线电视法案》的转播同意条款和伴随的联邦通信委员会规则时,媒体被要求向公众报道和解释这些问题。本文考察了五种大众报纸和五种行业出版物中由于ABC信号丢失而引发的新闻报道中的框架。具体而言,本文解决了以下问题:媒体如何描述公众在时代华纳-迪士尼纠纷中的作用?论文中提供的数据强烈表明,媒体未能以一种对公众有用的方式对潜在的政策问题进行令人信服的讨论。对媒体报道的分析得出的结论是,公众被塑造成被动的,在很大程度上被排除在围绕这一争端的政策辩论之外。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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