POWER OF THE PRESS BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO, MPA; LLB
L incoln believed that ‘with public sentiment nothing can fail; without it, nothing can succeed .’ H e declared that “public sentiment is everything,” and in his era nothing shaped public sentiment more powerfully than journalism. WHAT IS POWER OF THE PRESS? BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO, MPA; LLB
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO, MPA; LLB WHAT LAW SUPPORTs THE POWER OF THE PRESS? The Philippine constitution Section 7.- T HE RIGHT TO INFORMATION on matters of public concern. The right to access official records, documents and paper pertaining to official acts. secrets Will not apply if it is of public interest
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO, MPA; LLB WHAT LAWs SUPPORT THE POWER OF THE PRESS? Section 4.- F reedom of S peech, of E xpression or the P ress S peech and Expression cover any form of oral utterance such as protest as expression of opinion about subjects of PUBLIC CONCERN. P ress covers any sort of publications as instruments for mass communication. press
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO, MPA; LLB
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO, MPA; LLB M ass media as an instruments of social control HOW DO PRESS INFLUENCE? W ith the rise of the internet, the two-way relationship between mass media and public opinion is beginning to change, with the advent of new technologies such as blogging .
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO, MPA; LLB T he relation of the mass media to contemporary popular culture is commonly conceived in terms of dissemination from the elite to the mass. The concentration of ownership and media control has led to accusations of a 'media elite' having a form of 'cultural dictatorship'. a. Mass media, mass culture and elite Elite
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO, MPA; LLB A lthough a sizable portion of mass media offerings – particularly news, commentaries, documentaries, and other informational programs – deal with highly controversial subjects, the major portion of mass media offerings are designed to serve an entertainment function . b. Mass media in a free enterprise capitalist society
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO, MPA; LLB c. Media effects on nutrition O n average, children in the United States view 15 television food advertisements every day, 98% of which are low in nutritional value, averaging out to 5,500 messages per year.
BY: CHELDY SYGACO ELUMBA-PABLEO, MPA; LLB d. Media effects on body image A dvertising, particularly for fashion and cosmetics, has a powerful effect on how we see ourselves and how we view our own personal body image