Many audience theorists are concerned with what media do to people. There is a long tradition in the social sciences of investigating “
media effects.” Early examples include the
Payne Fund Studies, which assessed how movies affected young people, and
Harold Lasswell’s analysis of
WWI propaganda. Some have criticized early work for lacking analytical rigor and encouraging a belief in
powerful effects. Subsequent work in the social sciences employed a variety of methods to assess the media’s power to change attitudes and behaviors such as voting and violence. Sociologists
Elihu Katz and
Paul Lazarsfeld introduced the concept of a
two-step flow in communication, which suggested that media influence was moderated by
opinion leaders. By the late 1950s, most researchers concluded that media effects were limited by psychological processes like
selective exposure, social networks, and the commercial nature of media. This new consensus was dubbed the “dominant paradigm” of media sociology and it was criticized for being too
reductionist and understating the true power of media. While the tenets of that limited effects perspective retain much of their appeal, later theories have highlighted various ways in which media operate on audiences. These audience outcomes include: •
Agenda-setting: Asserts that media don’t tell people what to think (e.g., attitude change) but what to think about. Hence, media have the power to make things salient, setting the public agenda. •
Spiral of silence: Stipulates that people fear social isolation and look toward media to assess popular opinion. Hence, media portrayals (accurate or not) can lead people to remain silent if they believe their opinion is unpopular. •
Framing: Argues that media present a selective view of reality, privileging certain frames like problem definitions or moral judgments. Hence, media have the power to create interpretations of social reality. •
Knowledge-gap: Stipulates that as the media environment becomes more information rich, higher social-economic groups acquire information at a higher rate than others. Hence, media can polarize society into better and less well informed segments. •
Cultivation theory: Argues that television programs create a pervasive, but systematically distorted picture of social reality, leading heavy viewers to unthinkingly accept that reality. Hence, television has the power to cultivate distorted perceptions of reality. •
Third-person effects: Asserts that individuals believe that they are relatively impervious to media influence, while believing others are susceptible. Hence, they believe media have effects (on others) and behave accordingly.
Humanists have also been concerned with how media operate on audiences. With a specific focus on
rhetoric, some, such as
Walter Ong, have suggested that the
audience is a construct made up by the rhetoric and the
rhetorical situation the text is addressing. Similarly, some forms of literary criticism such as
Screen theory, argue that cinematic texts actually create spectators by sewing them into subject positions. In effect, audience members become unwitting accomplices in the production of meanings as orchestrated by the text. Hence media can promote widespread ideological outcomes such as
false consciousness and
hegemony. == Audience as agent ==