Today I become a citizen of the world.
Today I become a grown-up.
Today I become accountable to someone other
than myself and my parents, accountable for more than my grades.
Today I become accountable to the world,
to the future, to all the possibilities that life has to offer.
Starting today, my job is to show up, wide-eyed
and willing and ready.
For what? I don't know.
For anything, for everything.
To take on LIFE;
To take on LOVE;
To take on the RESPONSIBILITY and POSSIBILITY,
Today my friends, our lives begin.
And I for one, can't wait.
(Shonda Rhimes, 2009)
* Graduation Speech
Grey's Anatomy Season 5
Episode 22 - What a difference a Day Makes
I finally have a new number: 09154107322.:p
Sadly, I am no longer a 0917...:( Oh well!:p If you have the time please send me your contact details by replying to this email or by texting me.:p
I will be waiting for your numbers!:p
To a more media-literate society
and an empowered COMMunity!:p
- Mikey:p
The Ateneo de Manila Communication Department presents:
Boundaries and Belongings
January 17, 2008
10am-3pm
Escaler Hall
Cocktails will be served.
Students and scholars from all departments are invited!
For more information, contact Jonathan Ong at jo296@cam.ac.uk.
See you there! =)
stuttered.
spaced out.
weirdest and worst feeling ever.
but i ain't crying.
woot woot.
To a more media literate society!
A more empowered COMMunity!
Traditional discussion of media ethics is usually confined with legal case studies, codes of ethics, and stiff admonitions of sex and violence in the media. This course then is not about these little ethics but about morality—that is, the consequences of media consumption and production to the very meaning of our humanity. Media & Morality asserts that our everyday choices with the media—from poking, friending, and flaming online to taking photos of tourist destinations to watching foreign-language films—reflect how we see, hear, and touch distant others and how we ultimately regard ourselves.
Some of the questions we ask include: How social are social networking sites? Are Facebook users narcissistic poseurs or can they also be self-aware beings-with-others? What is emo-journalism and how can it contribute to identifying with distant others? How well did The Guidon report on the Ateneo suicides? In using the words “suicide incident” over “tragedy”, what moral claim did they make about the living and the dead? When is a joke only a joke? What can we learn about Teri Hatcher’s and Malu Fernandez’s “jokes” about OFWs and their fiery aftermath? What charity ads encourage donation—those that invoke happy thoughts or those that invoke shame and guilt?
As a brand new elective, M&M is ideal for pop culture aficionados and aspiring media producers. It encourages creative work, as students will participate in a) designing humanitarian campaigns and presenting them to advertising professionals, b) pitching other-oriented documentary and telenovela story concepts to GMA executives, and c) organizing a media studies conference headlined by a
Sign up for Com 106: Media and Society [Media and Morality]!
(Schedule Wednesdays 930-1230NN)
This article made me feel proud to have gone through the Audience Studies class this semester.
As future media practitioners and present Media consumers/users/audiences it is our responsibility to understand the media. Access, Analyze, Evaluate and Create.
To a more media literate society!:) woot woot!:)
________________________________________
Beyond ratings
MANILA, Philippines - If entertainment reports hit every sweet spot in local news programs, it can only be because networks have pursued these in favor of hard news.
Dr. Fernando D. Paragas, assistant professor at the Communication Research Department of the UP College of Mass Communication, calls this “subtle feeding prophecy.”
Paragas told the Inquirer in an interview: “When you highlight entertainment news so often, viewers will look for it. That’s your hook; you’re telling them, that’s what is important. But outside this hook-and-hold, viewers are really after the more substantive news.”
Paragas was expounding on the results of the 9th Extension Research Project of the UP Communication Research Department, “Mulat or Manunuri ng Ulat: Viewers Reception and Evaluation of Television News Programs.” The study sought information on what viewers give the most attention to. News and weather reports topped the survey, with entertainment and sports news hitting the tail end.
Tailored content
The UP study, a collaborative effort of the Communication Research classes in the university, covered all television news programs, but ABS-CBN’s “TV Patrol” and GMA-7’s “24 Oras,” turned out to have the highest viewership. Picking their choices, respondents identified themselves as either a Kapuso or a Kapamilya.
Paragas noted that this boiled down to the ratings game. “We should go beyond how many people watch a certain show and focus on what they get out of it,” he insisted. “Network policy makers look at the ratings and then tailor the program content accordingly. If you look at how people evaluate the news, you will see that this strategy doesn’t really work.”
According to the research, the professor noted, viewers don’t find most news programs’ content relevant to them as individuals because unnecessary focus has long been given to entertainment and crime.
Hard news buried
From the report: “The hook-and-hold approach of news programs unduly buries hard news items of national significance as it uses easy-to-sensationalize spot news items and entertainment-related soft news pieces to attract and maintain audiences.”
The respondents rated content according to their preferences: They put the banner news on top of the list, followed by the weather report, then national news, local/community news, public service, police reports, human interest/trivia, then entertainment and sports.
Paragas said the 1,100 respondents amply represented the Metro Manila population, as they were from 14 of the 17 cities and municipalities in the National Capital Region.
The viewers tapped were mostly women (62 percent), half of them between the ages of 25 and 49. Majority of these women were married, and said they spent over a fourth of the day watching TV. They prefer TV as source of news, with free TV as their primary medium.
“There’s a lot of gray area right now,” Paragas said when asked how the respondent-viewers received news program content. “They are satisfied but they still have a lot to say about what needs to be improved.”
Identified as the viewer-respondents’ areas of concern were: too much negative news reports; too much shallow, people-focused stories; one-sided/biased reporting; and weak graphics and mobile images.
The viewers also expressed concern over how “elite sources” were seemingly “ascribed greater credibility than non-elite informants.” They questioned the implications of male anchors being made to read the hard and spot news items, relegating the soft news to female anchors.
Surprisingly, however, Paragas said the respondents did not find most news stories sensationalistic, most likely because they were used to it. “People have come to accept these programs the way they are presented.”
Equally interesting was the acceptance of the big commercial load between news segments, as well as the soft-sell advertising within public service portions. One respondent came to the networks’ defense, explaining the commercial nature of the television business.
Not critically aware
The professor concluded that the informants were “mulat” (aware) but “not critically aware,” as most of them turned out to be “peripheral” rather than “central” viewers.
This, he said, pointed to the need to conduct a study on media literacy, to determine how literate TV viewers really are in assessing the content of news reports.
At the study’s recent presentation to students and TV networks at the Media Center of the UP College of Mass Communication, members of the audience raised the question of how the research could actually generate results.
Paragas clarified, however, that the study was done purely for academic reasons and not for lobby purposes.
No agenda
“Directly influencing policy makers? We don’t have that agenda,” he said. “Some people may think the study precludes application of findings. But the more important aspect is laying the groundwork for these young people. The students will be the future of the communication and media industry. So if they have this consciousness now, then they can carry it with them when they become policy makers.”
Copyright 2008 Philippine Daily Inquirer. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
- Mood:dorky
i want a baby...
- Mood:
bouncy
the semester is over...sophomore year is over...com124 is over...but
SUMMER is finally here!!!
inuman...beach...party!!!
*to Light Talk or not to Light Talk?
Open Auditions for
High School Musical
POSTPONED to November 25, 2006. Same time, same venue. Please spread the word.
- Mood:
cheerful
Blue Repertory and Little Boy Productions
For questions, contact 0919-3608974
- Mood:
weird
love...love...love...LOVE...
i want to dance...('',)
how is your sembreak?
*i miss bicol...:(
- Mood:
giggly

