Mass Media
Mass media is part of the twenty-first century bandwagon which starts mainstream trends. The term medium defines a form of communication; mass media means a way of communication to vast populations. Mediums such as television, radio, internet, print, and mobile phones are examples that communicate to the masses.
The term mass media on a prima facie understanding simply means: communicating to a large group of audience. In my understanding of mass media, it is a process which ideas are created and manifested in a form of medium. This medium is then passed on and decoded by the audience to be information which they perceive. This process is done but not limited to mediums that may range from radio to internet to book and prints. What is difficult to get across in mass media is the accuracy of interpretation of the message, because the way an individual interprets an idea is often heterogenous compared others within that same mass.
McLuhan’s “medium is the message” regarding mass media’s effects proves to be quite true (Playboy). For example, at the beginning of the year for Mass Communications class, I designed my autobiography to be a double sided billboard which passed a generic but overlooked health message. Explaining it simply by word of mouth would not have been enough, and some audience members may not fully understand my poster as a whole. However, with the billboard, I was able to produce a solid visual for each of my concepts. With the flip motion, I can present the first concept as a single identity that everyone can quickly understand without having to interpret the relationship between it and the hidden second concept. When that first concept is fully understood, I can then flip the image to the second image to explain my second concept. With both concepts solidly understood, the audience will put two and two together and understand the whole theme of my poster. With my visual medium, I can effectively and accurately relay my thoughts to a much bigger audience, rather than just the few who understand the verbal explanation.
Simply put, a medium is the bridge in which invisible thoughts and ideas are able to cross from one mind to another (McCloud, p. 195). Without media (and ESP), we would never have been able to communicate from mind to mind.
Works Cited
Playboy. “The Playboy Interview: Marshall McLuhan.” Playboy Magazine. March 1969.
McCloud, Scott. Understanding Comics. New York. HarperCollins. 1994
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