Black and brown damask

Wednesday 30 May 2012

Agenda Setting


When: Week 11
What: Lecture 10
Who: Dr. Bruce Redman

This weeks lecture was taught by Dr. Bruce Redman and was about Agenda Setting. This lecture was the third last lecture for JOUR1111 this semester, and I was, unfortunately, unable to attend. Instead, I listened to the lecture recording and viewed the powerpoint on Blackboard. 

The Pre-Amble: The Four Agendas

During the lecture, Dr. Bruce Redman identified four types of Agenda that together form Agenda Setting, and this is what they are:

1. Public Agenda - A set of topics that members of the public perceive as being important. 

2. Policy Agenda - Issues that decision makers think are salient or prominent and are of particular interest to the public (i.e. legislators). 
3. Corporate Agenda - Issues that big business and corporations consider important.
4. Media Agenda - Issues discussed in the media.

What is Agenda Setting

In this weeks reading "Agenda Setting" by Renita Coleman, Agenda Setting was described as "the process of the mass media presenting certain issues frequently and prominently with the result that large segments of the public come to perceive those issues as more important than others". 

This means that the more the media covers a story, issue or event, the more the audience will think about it and perceive it as important. 

Two Basic Assumptions of Agenda Setting in the Media

The first assumption is that the mass media does not merely reflect and report reality they filter and shape it. The second assumption is that media concentration on a few issues and subjects leads the public to perceive those issues as more important than other issues.

The History of Agenda Setting

The Agenda Setting theory can be traced back to the 1920s where American political scientist and communications theorist, Harold Lasswell formed the "Hypodermic Needle" model. The "Hypodermic Needle" model is where the mass media injects direct influence into the audience. The Agenda Setting theory can also be found in Walter Lippman's book "Public Opinion" where Lippman argues that the mass media creates images of events in the public or audience's minds. Lippman's notion has remained prominent even in contemporary times where images from things like the Queensland Floods and the Royal Wedding still linger in the back of your mind. Dr. Bruce Redman stated that this theory was also used in the 1930s, where Adolf Hitler and Leni Riefenstahl used the power of images to influence the public into supporting a particular ordeal and group. 

In 1968, the Agenda Setting theory, was developed by Maxwell McCombs and Donald Shaw during the Nixon presidential campaign in  Chapel Hill, North Carolina. Dr. Bruce Redman stated that the theory was developed when McCombs and Shaw surveyed 100 undecided voters on the key issues and measured that against the content that was displayed in the mass media. Their survey resulted in the hypothesis that the mass media had set the agenda by emphasising specific topics more than others.

The Agenda Setting Theory

Dr. Bruce Redman identified two main types of Agenda Setting theory and these were first level Agenda Setting theory and second level Agenda Setting theory.

Dr. Bruce Redman stated that first level Agenda Setting theory is for the most part studied by researchers and emphasises the major issues and the transfer of the salience of those issues. At this level the media suggest what the public should focus on through coverage. Second level Agenda Setting theory is essentially, how the media focuses on certain attributes of an issue and how they suggest how people should think about an issue.

What Agenda Setting Does and Why

During the lecture, Dr. Bruce Redman identified what Agenda Setting does and why the mass media does it.

What Agenda Setting Does
  • Transfer of issue salience from the news media to the public.
  • Transfer of issue salience for both issues and other objects such as political figures.
  • Elite media companies like the "ABC", "CNN", "Sky News", etc. often set the agenda for issues in other media. 

Why does the mass media set the agenda?

- Redman 2012

The Agenda Setting Family

1. Media Gatekeeping

Media gatekeeping is the exposure of an issue by the mass media and how the mass media reveals the issue to the public.

2. Media Advocacy

Media advocacy is the deliberate promotion of a particular message whether it's an anti-smoking, drug and alcohol campaign, or the promotion of healthy dieting and health issues, just to name a few.
3. Agenda Cutting

Most of the issues that are happening in the world are represented in the media. Instead of presenting large issues like HIV and Poverty, take a backseat to the engagement of Brad and Angelina or Lindsay Lohan starring on Glee. Because large issues like HIV and poverty don't receive as much time in the media, they are cared about less by the public.

4. Agenda Surfing

Agenda surfing is when the media "surfs" or follows a topic or trend. This notion is very prominent in contemporary times with the spread of the Kony 2012 video over various social websites and the internet on a whole. 

5. The Diffusion of News

The diffusion of news is When, where and how an important event or issue is communicated and released to the public. Dr. Bruce Redman demonstrated the diffusion of news using the announcement President Barack Obama made when Osama Bin Laden had been found and killed. He stated that the announcement had been rehearsed and prerecorded, and was released to the public days after the event took place.

6. Portrayal of an Issue

The portrayal of an issue by a media outlet can influence how that issue is perceived by the public. If media outlets portray the same issue differently the public can formulate their own opinion.

7. Media Dependence 

Media dependence is when a person is dependent on the media for information and news, and because of this, they are more susceptible to media agenda setting. In contemporary times a large majority of the public depend on social websites like Twitter and Facebook for information and news.  

Strengths and Weaknesses of Agenda Setting Theory

The Strengths of Agenda Setting Theory
  • The agenda setting theory has explanatory power because it explains why people prioritise similar issues as more important than others.
  • The agenda setting theory has predictive power because it predicts that if people are exposed to the same media, they will see the same issues as important. 
  • The agenda setting theory has organising power because it helps organise existing knowledge of media effects. 
  • The agenda setting theory can be proven false. If people aren't exposed to the same media, they won't find the same issues as important.
  • Its meta-theoretical assumptions are balanced on the scientific side.
  • It lays the groundwork for further research.

The Weaknesses of Agenda Setting Theory
  • Media users may not be as ideal as the agenda setting theory assumes. The public may not be well-informed or completely engaged in contemporary news, which could cause them to be ignorant of certain details. 
  • If a person has already formed an opinion on an issue, the effect of agenda setting theory is weakened. This usually applies with politics and elections because the public has already made up their mind on who they are voting for.
  • News cannot create and conceal problems. The effect can merely alter the awareness, priorities and salience the public attaches to a set of problems.
  • The internet, tablets and other types of new media have formed a whole new ballgame in terms of Agenda Setting. 

Agenda Setting Examples

In the lecture, Dr. Bruce Redman identified climate change as an example of agenda setting. Another example of agenda setting that I believe is very prominent in contemporary media is the war on terror.

Wednesday 23 May 2012

JOUR1111 Annotated Bibliography


My Annotated Bibliography

My Annotated Bibliography will analyse three contemporary news items surrounding the disappearance and death of mother-of-three Allison Baden-Clay and one academic article about the representation of crime stories by the media. The three news items that are being analysed are a television broadcast by “Ten News at Five”, a newspaper article in “The Courier Mail” and an online article by the “Brisbane Times”. The academic article is titled Crime in the News: How Crimes, Offenders and Victims are Portrayed in the Media and its authors are Jessica Pollak and Charis Kubrin.

Kubrin, C.E. & Pollak J.M. (2007, January 1). Crime in the News: How Crimes, Offenders and Victims are Portrayed in the Media. The Journal of Criminal Justice and Popular Culture, 14, p 1070-8286.

The authors, Jessica Pollak, a research associate at the Milton S. Eisenhower Foundation and Charis Kubrin, the co-editor of Crime and Society: Crime, 3rd Edition and co-author of Privileged Places: Race, Residence and the Structure of Opportunity (George Washington University Online Community, n.d), conducted a study that examined how crime stories are represented in the media. In the study, Pollak and Kubrin examined and compared 71 crime stories across two old media platforms, the newspaper and television and documented the similarities and differences (Pollak & Kubrin, 2007. p. 59).

Pollak and Kubrin found that for a crime story to be portrayed in the media it had to be rather violent, which infers the statement “If it bleeds it leads” (Pollak & Kubrin, 2007. p. 78). They also found that, across the two mediums, objective facts (type of crime, location and time of crime, and sex and age of the victim or offender) were equally mentioned and that subjective or unnecessary facts (race of the offender or victim and the offender and victim relationship) varied immensely (Pollak & Kubrin, 2007. p. 65). Across the mediums, the offences caused by juvenile offenders were portrayed as “senseless and irrational”, and juvenile victims were portrayed as “innocent” (Pollak & Kubrin, 2007. p. 78).

Bellow are three news items surrounding the disappearance and death of Allison Baden-Clay and all of which have been a prominent news story across contemporary local media platforms, inferring the statement “If it’s local it leads” (Redman, 2012). The primary audiences of the three news stories are people who knew Allison and her friends and family, and members of the community, state and country who are interested in Allison’s story.

Henry, R. (Reporter). (2012, May 11th). Ten News at Five. [Television Broadcast]. Brisbane, QLD: Network Ten.

Renae Henry, winner of the 2012 Young Australian Journalist of the Year award by the Walkley Foundation, conducted the “Ten News at Five” television broadcast surrounding the funeral of the deceased Allison Baden-Clay (The Walkley Foundation, 2012). “Ten News at Five” is a news program that is produced by “Network Ten” and is presented on the free-to-air television channel, “Ten”. “Network Ten” is a platform for commercial media, which means that it generates a large majority of its profits through advertising, promotions and commercials. The television broadcast began with live coverage of Renae Henry standing out front of St. Paul’s Anglican Church in Ipswich, where Allison’s funeral had commenced earlier that day.

Renae Henry briefly outlined the events of the funeral and the people that were there to mourn and pay their respects to Allison, which included her family, friends and husband, Gerard Baden-Clay and their three daughters. Recorded footage of the funeral and Allison’s friends and family were also displayed throughout the television broadcast along with Renae Henry’s voiceover. The television broadcast also featured the recorded voices of Allison’s sister, Vanessa Fowler, and best friend, Kerry-Anne Walker, as they said a final goodbye and pledged justice for Allison. In Renae Henry’s television broadcast, the imagery and video footage depicted an accurate representation of Allison’s funeral, reflecting the emotions and the undertone of the event to the audience. The coverage of Allison’s funeral was respectful, compassionate, nonintrusive and of good taste, and it allowed the audience to form a perception of who Allison was; a loving, caring, unselfish women and model mum (Henry, 2012).

Kyriacou, K (2012, May 12th). Only Talent Missing was Self-Confidence. The Courier Mail, p. 4-5.


Kate Kyriacou’s newspaper article in “The Courier Mail”, Only Talent Missing was Self-Confidence, described Allison Baden-Clay’s youth as a ballerina up until her corporate success at Flight Centre and marriage to husband, Gerard Baden-Clay. “The Courier Mail” is owned and produced by “News Limited”, which is predominately owned by Rupert Murdoch, and like “Network Ten” it is a platform for commercial media. The newspaper article featured interviews from various people who were involved in Allison’s life. These people included Australia Youth Ballet director Inara Svalbe, fellow ballerina Krista Reeves, old school friend Kirsten Willow, Flight Centre founder Graham Turner, and friend and work colleague Sue Rennick and they all described Allison’s personality or a moment they shared with her.

Like Renae Henry’s television broadcast, Kate Kyriacou’s newspaper article expressed the kind, grieving words from the people who loved and cared about Allison, her friends. Kirsten Willow stated that she and her old classmates were devastated about the death of Allison, stating that they haven’t been able to sleep (Kyriacou, 2012). Alternatively, the people that were interviewed in the newspaper article were people that knew Allison in the past and not in contemporary times like Allison’s best friend, Kerry-Anne Walker and Allison’s sister, Vanessa Fowler who were depicted in the television broadcast. In the newspaper article, the large amount of descriptive content and photographs enabled its readers to form a perception of what Allison was like as a child and what she was like as an adult.

Callinan, R & Jabour, B. (2012). The Reclusive Side of a Grieving Husband. The Brisbane Times. Retrieved May 12th, 2012, from http://www.brisbanetimes.com.au/national/the-reclusive-side-of-a-grieving-husband-20120512-1yj5w.html

The “Brisbane Times” online article published by Rory Callinan and Bridie Jabour, claimed to depict the withdrawn behavior of Allison Baden-Clay’s husband, Gerard Baden-Clay. The “Brisbane Times” is owned and run by “Fairfax Media” and like “Ten News at Five” and “The Courier Mail” it is a platform for commercial media. The online article described Gerard’s behavior and actions since the disappearance of his wife, Allison, as “reclusive” and stated that he has a “low profile stance”(Callinan & Jabour, 2012). The online article also claimed that Gerard’s behaviour had “prompted an online frenzy of conspiracy theories”(Callinan & Jabour, 2012).

In comparison to the “Ten News at Five” television broadcast and “The Courier Mail” newspaper article, the “Brisbane Times” online article had a slanted view and was somewhat biased. The online article contained many subjective facts and Pollak and Kubrin describe these facts as unnecessary to the telling of the story and “more often than not, add a layer of bias”(Pollak & Kubrin, 2007. p 65). It could be perceived by the audience that both Rory Callinan and Bridie Jabour infer that Gerard is hiding something and perhaps has something to do with the murder of his wife, Allison. The article ceased to mention that Gerard is a grieving husband and father, who has to protect his three children from the trauma of losing their mother. The article proceeded to explore Gerard’s past and home life with Allison and his three children. Rory Callinan and Bridie Jabour revealed this information by reposting direct statements from Gerard’s blog.


APA Style Reference List

  • Kubrin, C.E. & Pollak J.M. (2007, January 1). Crime in the News: How Crimes, Offenders and Victims are Portrayed in the Media. The Journal of Criminal Justice and Popular Culture, 14, p 1070-8286. 



  •   Redman, B. (2012). Week Nine: News Values [Powerpoint slides]. Retrieved from JOUR1111, University of Queensland Blackboard Online: http://www.elearning.uq.edu.au/

  • Henry, R. (Reporter). (2012, May 11th). Ten News at Five. [Television Broadcast]. Brisbane, QLD: Network Ten.



  • Kyriacou, K (2012, May 12th). Only Talent Missing was Self-Confidence. The Courier Mail, p. 4-5.