Regardless of agenda-building type, modern scholarship is beginning to expand the scope of what is considered media, and how the expanded universe of media will impact agenda building. Popular interactive platforms such as blogs,
Facebook, and
Twitter have become the conduit for the large-scale public interaction. The increased role of citizens signals a new direction for agenda-building research, given that the Internet has distributed the means of information production and fragmented the information environment, marking a shift in the power from legacy media to build monolithic agendas to anyone with the ability to get online. Several studies show that agenda building effects occur in the digital age.
YouTube influenced coverage of California's
Proposition 8, and, possibly, impacted the referendum. Parmalee focused on agenda-setting and
Twitter by interviewing journalists; he found that Twitter is a regular part of their routine. Wallsten compared media coverage and blog discussion; results showed that journalists concerns matched blogger concerns. Jacobson found that comments on
Rachel Maddow's Facebook page influenced the broadcast. In the scientific context, Runge, Brossard, Scheufele, & Xenos found that social media played a key role in defining the "pink slime" issue, and the industry had to defend what they normally call “lean finely textured beef.” There is also
anecdotal evidence of digital agenda building: • One of the first examples of digital agenda-building concerns the resignation of
Trent Lott. In 2002, Lott resigned
Senate majority leader due to racist comments that he made at
Strom Thurmond's birthday party. Bloggers took up the issue, forced the mainstream media to do so, which eventually forced Lott to resign. •
Mitt Romney’s “47%”. Scout Pouty, a bartender, posted a video on YouTube that showed Romney dismissing “47% of Americans” who he alleged were over relying on the government. It was picked up by smaller news organizations, but later, mainstream media covered the story, and while Romney's comments may have been taken out of context, they nonetheless damaged the campaign. • Michele Landis Dauber, an attorney present at the sentencing of
Brock Turner, facilitated the sharing of the victim's impact statement with
BuzzFeed, which eventually led to wide coverage in the mainstream media and the attention of prominent political figures. The judge in the case,
Aaron Persky, is facing recall and now presides over civil, rather than criminal, cases.
Algorithms Scholars are now starting to address what agenda building means, and what impact it has, when both machines and human beings set the agenda. Algorithms, such as the ranking algorithms in use at Facebook, apply previous online behavior to predict future interests to serve personalized content; the underlying, unseen algorithm manifests itself in the form of what information is presented to the viewer. The impact of algorithmic editorial decision-making, particularly at Facebook, is immense: “...the results of [the] automated linking process shape the social lives and reading habits of more than 1 billion daily active users - one-fifth of the world’s adult population...it can be tweaked to make us happy or sad; it can expose us to new and challenging ideas or insulate us in ideological bubbles." Facebook downplays its role as publisher, but given that Facebook has become a major distributor of news, that platforms such as Facebook are “just the pipes” is an increasingly untenable stance to take.
Controversy Algorithmic determinism of news has not been without controversy. For example, Facebook recently came under fire for censoring the “Napalm girl” photo of Phan Thị Kim Phuc (they blamed the algorithm), it conducted an
emotional contagion experiment on users without their knowledge, == References ==