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Sensationalism (Spectacularization) of political news in Mexican, American, and Canadian TV news shows
José Carlos LozanoTecnológico de Monterrey
at Monterrey, México
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Contemporary news programs, sensationalism, and infotainment
“Spectacularization”: use of resources of content and form which are directed towards emotions and senses instead of reason.
Anchors and reporters editorialize (make personal comments), adopt obtrusive tones of voice (high and fast style), with dramatic emphasis.
Emphasis is in the immediate, provoking a lack of contextualization.
Information is packaged with visual effects, like eyewitness camera viewpoint, dramatic music, fast editing, slow motion shots, sound effects and design and edition resources, all used extensively in TV fiction and films.
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infotainment
Objective: to attract audiences usually not interested in watching television news, and to reinforce the interest of those previously interested.
News are transformed in entertainment, they are trivialized, presented as dramatic pieces, funny or sensationalistic.
Instead of addressing TV viewers as citizens, it address them as consumers and rating points
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Why should we worry?
In contemporary societies, consuming news messages is a necessary condition for the political, economic, and cultural participation of individuals at all levels: local, national, and international
Jensen: news remain in the audience as parte of its perception of the world, and can be transformed in a resource for action beyond the immediate context of its exposure to the TV screen
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Objective
Analysis of the transformations of TV news in Canada, the United States, and Mexico due to: Globalization Liberalization Competition
To determine the degree of spectacularization present in news stories transmitted in the news shows with more rating in these three countries, both in content and structure
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Method
Content analysis: two weeks of all news stories (except sports) transmitted in the newscasts with the highest rating in Canada, the US and Mexico.
The National (CBC, Canada) NBC Nightly News (NBC, USA) Noticiero Televisa (Televisa, Mexico) Noticiero Hechos (TV Azteca, Mexico)
Soon: Teletrece and 24 Horas of Chile
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Personalization & dramatization:
accent in the individual, struggle among public personalities, emphasis in celebrities and individual characteristics. (Gringas, 1998)
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Dramatization & personalization
Televisa México
%
Azteca México
%
NBC USA
%
CBC Canada
% No 45 38 18 39 Yes, in 50% or more
32 53 17 25
Yes, in less than 50%
23 9 65 36
Total 100% 100% 100% 100%
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Fragmentation
Facts and events in “soundbytes” according to the fast rythm demanded by audiovisual media, without offering information about the complexity of different positions about each topic.
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Fragmentation
Televisa (México)
%
Azteca (México)
%
NBC (USA)
%
CBC (Canada)
% No 54 45 13 78 Yes, in 50% or more
37 13 49 2
Yes, in less than 50%
9 42 38 20
Total 100% 100 100 100 9014 8560 5900 8526
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Tendency of the news story
1) Was the news story presented in an objective, neutral way, with no personal comments by anchors or reporters, with no dramatic phrases or references, with no adjectives?
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Televisa México
%
Azteca México
%
NBC USA
%
CBC Canada
% Objective, neutral, no comments
52 47 20 21
Comments by anchor or reporter
48 53 80 79
Total 100% 100% 100% 100%
Tendency
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Contextualization
Degree in which the news story provided background, contrasting points of view, historical facts of the topic in question, implications about the future, previous information and data or just information about the immediate event.
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Contextualization
Televisa México
%
Azteca México
%
NBC USA
%
CBC Canada
% Yes 61 60 41 87 No 39 40 59 13 Total 100% 100 100% 100%
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Type of information Televisa
Mexico Azteca Mexico
NBC USA
CBC Canada
Press Conferences & events 19 5 7 3 Press releases 12 .7 15 29 Other mass media as source 7 31 Several or other rutinary 23 43 44 31 Exclusive interviews 3 1 4 Investigative reporting 20 14 26 21 Several & other non-routine 8 .7 1 Mixture of procedures 8 7 7 10 Total 100% 100% 100% 100% 157 137 87 70
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Journalistic role
Televisa México
%
Azteca México
%
NBC USA
%
CBC Canada
% Government advocate .1 0 6 2 Neutral 25 17 36 13 Adversarial 6 8 24 26 Not valid 69 75 34 59 Total 100% 100% 100% 100%
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Audiovisual packaging
Formal aspects like graphic design or editing techniques contribute to what can be considered sensationalism: Video manouvers: camara movements. They
influence or modify the recording of the news event
Decorative effects: resources to get the attention of viewers not included in the original recording of the event (postproduction)
(Maria Elizabeth Grabe, Shuhua Zhou y Brooke Barnett, 2001)
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Special effects Televisa
México %
TV Azteca México
%
NBC USA
%
CBC Canada
% Close up 27 39 39 62 Eyewitness camera viewpoint 13 2 31 44 Sound effects 33 54 75 79 Dramatic music 30 18 10 43 Obtrusive voice 40 83 96 90 Slow motion video 20 27 29 41
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Duration of shots in news stories
Televisa México
%
Azteca México
%
NBC USA
%
CBC Canada
% Average # of secs by news story 57 62 68 122 Average # of shots by news story
14 15 12 18
Average # of secs by shot 4 4 6 7 Average number of special effects by news story
4 4 3 4
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Discussion
More than 70% of Mexicans rely on TV for political information
infotainment and spectacularization may be useful to widen exposure to news programs by viewers who were not interested in news before. Boredom and distrut of politicians have made audience members indifferent towards politics.
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Popularity of fiction & entertainment
Using structures and resources from fiction and entertainment may be the only way to attract viewers more interested in movies and series than in politics
In Mexico, local and national news are among the TV programs with the highest ratings, along with telenovelas
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Negative aspects
However, sensationalim does not provides sound information of fundamental aspects for the formation of public opinion and decision making by citizens.
Absence of news stories focused on processes, on structure, contextualized, balanced.
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Implications
Personalization and dramatization in Mexico may account in part for the revival of the PRI, which despite staying 70 years in power, is making a strong comeback in Mexico due to the absence of contextual and structural elements in the political coverage, and the focus on good and bad politicians
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Voters are not that passive
Audience research in communication studies in the last 20 years coincide in asserting that media audiences are active and that they react to contents according to their social and cultural mediations, gender, age, social class, education, and so on.
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Voters are distrustful of news
A survey in the three largest cities in Mexico in 1999 found that almost all viewers, regardless of social class, gender, and age, were highly distrustful of TV news programs and anchors, despite news programs being highly watched by them
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Personalization vs. voting decision
Personalization and dramatization of political news in Mexico have made Vicente Fox a president with high levels of popularity at the personal level, but that was not reflected in the mid-term elections, were the PAN lost some governorships and many local elections
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Quick decline in excessive spectacularization
In the presidential election of 2000 in Mexico, an excess of spectacularization and political marketing worked well for the triumph of Vicente Fox
In the mid-term elections of 2003, this approach didn´t work for the most aggressive candidates; voters wanted a less strident and less negative use of media and political marketing. Audiences learnt fast.