1 / 7

MEP315 SPORT, MEDIA AND CELEBRITY

MEP315 SPORT, MEDIA AND CELEBRITY. 3. Political economies of sport and the media. Political economy of global media. Media production serves the interests of existing political and economic powers

Télécharger la présentation

MEP315 SPORT, MEDIA AND CELEBRITY

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. MEP315 SPORT, MEDIA AND CELEBRITY 3. Political economies of sport and the media

  2. Political economy of global media • Media production serves the interests of existing political and economic powers • Rampant US media and cultural imperialism (inc. American sports/sporting celebrities) destroys local sporting cultures, events, traditions, etc. • Multinational corporations (MNCs) dominate the market share of advertising revenue from media sports coverage

  3. TV sport rights: media macro economics (Rowe 1999) • NBC costs for exclusive US TV rights to show OLYMPIC GAMES: • 1980 – $72 million • 1988 - $300 million • 2000 - $715 million • 2004 - $793 million • 2008 - $894 million • 2012 – $1.181 billion (Horne 2006)

  4. Corporate synergy • MNCs are able to integrate their sports coverage both horizontally (cross-media content / promotion) and vertically • BSkyB (owned by Murdoch’s News Corporation) pays £304 million (1992), £670 million (1996) and £1.11 billion (2001) for exclusive rights to Premier League football, publicised by The Sun,etc

  5. Vertical integration Camera/ technical staff PRODUCTION Investment in teams/competitions Advertising DISTRIBUTION Subscription offers Pay-per-view channels EXHIBITION/RETAIL Interactive digital technologies

  6. ATHLETICS – yes FOOTBALL – mostly (but limited in North American markets) GOLF, TENNIS – maybe (but limited in most of Africa & some of Asia/South America) CRICKET – no (only S. Asia, S. Africa, UK, Aus/NZ, Caribbean) AMERICAN FOOTBALL – no (mostly USA & Canada, exc. Superbowl) BASEBALL – no (only N. Amer., Far East) BASKETBALL – no (N. Amer., parts of Europe & Africa, China/SE Asia) ICE HOCKEY – no (N. Amer., parts of Europe) Globalised sports?

  7. UK - government protection of sports coverage on terrestrial TV • 1996 Broadcasting Act – the World Cup and European Championship Finals, the Olympic Games, FA Cup Final, Grand National, Derby, Wimbledon Finals, Rugby World Cup Final and RL Challenge Cup Final to be live on free-to-air TV • Qualifying rounds of the above, Test Match and World Cup Cricket, Six Nations Rugby, Open Golf, Ryder Cup, Commonwealth Games, World Athletics Champs to receive secondary coverage

More Related