Tema 68
Tema 68
Tema 68
Television.- British Television’s first channel was run by the BBC and financed by
an annual charge on viewers and without advertising. In 1963, a second channel, which
was commercial, was allowed to start up and, by 1982, there were two BBC channels
and two commercial channels, ITV and channel 4, which give some time to minority
interest.
The Independent Broadcasting Authority was established by Act of Parliament in
1954. They were in charge of controlling programmes and advertising in the different
channels.
After several years, channel 5 was also introduced as a new commercial channel.
These channels are financed by spot advertising in ‘natural’ breaks between
programmes.
With the introduction of cable and satellite TV, British viewers can enjoy a wide
range of channels, both national and international. The most common network within
this category is Sky Television.
People with a television set have to buy an annual government licence, even if they
rent it. The BBC has to manage with the licence money plus profits obtained from the
sale of records, publications and programmes that are sold abroad.
5.- ADVERTISING
Advertising is a form of mass communication intended, in its visual meaning, to
promote the sale of a product.
The term is also used for mass communication intended to influence people’s
opinion, to gain political support, to advance a particular cause or to elicit desires of the
advertiser in general, although these practices may involve different techniques,
measures and legal requirements.
The 19th century was a period of expansion in advertising, as well as in business.
The Industrial Revolution expanded the output of factories, and advertising helped this
development.
The growth of the ‘penny press’ and of magazines, combined with the improved
educational level among the Western nations, brought an increment in audience.
Improvements in transport made possible an increase in circulation and reduction in
price.
Another new medium, television, was added to the advertising scene immediately
after WWII. It had a spectacular growth in the US and became the second largest
advertising medium, after newspapers.
Basically, advertising media can be found in newspapers, magazines, television,
radio, direct mail, outdoor media or transit media such as signs or station posters.
Newspapers are the most widely used advertising medium. Ads appear in all kind of
newspapers, no matter if they are national, local or free-sheet publications.
Television advertisers buy units of time. The cost of a unit varies depending on the
size of the audience.
In order to measure television audiences, an audimeter is used, it is an electronic
device that is connected to all television receiving sets in a representative sample of
households. Another method, the coincidental telephone, is also used, it consists on
telephoning a certain number of households and asking if a television is turned on and,
if so, to what station or programme. The roster-recall method involves interviews in
which a roster of all station and programmes readily available in the area is presented to
a sample of people.
Then, those audiences are classified by means of programme rating, share of
audience, projected audience or audience composition.
Many governments have considered radio an important medium for education and
public information and severely restricted its use for commercial advertising. However,
some governments, as the British, have permitted the establishment of commercial
stations in recent years. Radio advertisement time is sold and measured in the same way
as television ones.
Advertising is often characterised as a means of selling to the masses. That is why
the most efficient strategy is to unify segments of population and address advertising to
them. The basic variables of media strategy are reach, how many people are exposed to
the message, and frequency, how many times are they exposed.
Advertising requires that ideas should be given a visual form by artistic and graphic
design. It must communicate quickly and clearly and it should attract attention, lodge
the advertising message in the conscious or unconscious mind, induce an active,
positive attitude towards the message, instead of a passive one, and impress a
favourable memory of the message of the mind.
The success of advertising design depends on the topicality, on the quality of the
design and on psychological factors. These largely determine the reactions of the person
to whom the advertisement is addressed.
7.- CONCLUSION
It is pretty obvious that nowadays radio, television and advertising are enormously
present in everybody’s lives, not only in English-speaking countries, but virtually
around the globe. That is why many people believe radio and television have had as
much impact on modern society as printing, that is, they have completely affected our
lives.
It is definitely important for teachers of English to have a wide knowledge about the
consequences of the mass media and advertising on the English-speaking societies; but
one should not forget that in turn it is also important to develop some notions on this
matter in students, for this can also be part of the socio-cultural competence that they
are expected to reach.
We can provide our students with texts from the English-speaking mass media
( newspaper articles, radio extracts...) in order to initiate and encourage them to work
with English texts of this type.
Finally, we should not neglect one particularly important point related to the so-
called transversal or cross-curricular topics. Consumers’ education, e.g., is a subject
which should be aroused in class in order to make students think about the dangers of
our own consumer society, in particular of advertising.
8.- BIBLIOGRAPHY
- Bromhead. Life in Modern Britain and America. Longman, London, 1985
- Golding, P.The Mass Media. 1974
- Well. Mass Communication: A World View. 1974