In media studies,
"media event" is an established theoretical term first developed by
Elihu Katz and
Daniel Dayan in the 1992 book
Media Events: The Live Broadcasting of History. Media events in this sense are ceremonial events with narrative progression that are live broadcast and gather a large segment of the population, such as royal weddings or funerals. The defining characteristics of a media event are that it is immediate (i.e., it is broadcast live), organized by a non-media entity, containing ceremonial and dramatic value, preplanning, and focusing on a personality, whether that be a single person or a group. The 2009 book
Media Events in a Global Age updates the concept. The theory of media events has also been applied to social media, for instance in an analysis of tweets about the Swedish elections or an analysis of the
Bernie Sanders mittens meme during the
inauguration of Joe Biden. For example in the instance of the Bernie Sanders meme event, Anne Jerslev argues that it constituted a user-generated media event. The term "pseudo-event" was coined by the
theorist and
historian Daniel J. Boorstin in his 1961 book
The Image: A Guide to Pseudo-events in America: “The celebration is held,
photographs are taken, the occasion is widely reported.” The term is closely related to idea of
hyperreality and thus
postmodernism, although Boorstin's coinage predates the two ideas and related work of postmodern thinkers such as
Jean Baudrillard. A media event being a kind of
planned event, it may be called
inauthentic in contrast to a spontaneous one. In distinguishing between a pseudo-event and a spontaneous one, Boorstin states characteristics of a pseudo-event in his book titled "Hidden History." He says that a pseudo-event is: dramatic, repeatable, costly, intellectually planned, and social. It causes other pseudo-events, and one must know about it to be considered "informed". ==Types==