Friday, August 31, 2012

Assesment Task 1 : Tara Aguiar 42875943


Media Convergence

If you look back not even 10 years ago, it can be seen how much technology has advanced in just the past decade. This advancement in technology has shaped how we conduct our lives, and how the media plays its role in it. This “Convergence” has allowed society to interact electronically with the outside world, allowing perceptions to change. 

“Convergence is never just a technological process but is implicated in, and expressed as, profound and ongoing social, cultural and economic change.” (Dwyer, p. 8, 2010)

This displays how influential the change in technology has in society, and thus how the media uses this to their advantage, thus the term “Media Convergence.”  This term depicts how the media industry has attempted to merge both “old and new technologies …referencing the intersection of distinct media and information technology systems which had previously been thought of as separate and self-contained” (Dwyer, p.2, 2010). 

An example of such a shifting Industry would be the Music business. Not only has the way we listen to music changed, but the way we consume and view it as well. We no longer live in an age where the only way to listen to our favourite song was to hope that the radio would play it, or go to a music store to buy the single or album. We now download music from iTunes, or look through Torrents for the latest music and other media. Society became a place where “every important story gets told, every brand gets sold, and every consumer gets courted across multiple media platforms.” (Jenkins, p. 3 2006).

When you hear the term music video, we now tend to think of the internet and YouTube as a source to view and obtain these pieces of visual music, but before this television shows such as MTV, [V], GTK, Countdown and Rage were the only source in which to view these visual acts of music. This technological progress from Analogue (Physical media such as film negative paper and vinyl records) to Digital (the 1s and 0s of a computer system). This shows how both music and video have become simply just lines of computerised code which can be manipulated to fit the audience it is produced for (Aoun, pp 166).
 
MTV, now known more for its reality shows than its music, used to be the “hybrid of rock music and film imagery” (Baxter, 1985). It was the stepping stone for many famous music videos such as Thriller by Michael Jackson; Video killed the radio star by the Buggles and Tusk by Fleetwood Mac. This widely popular show broadcasted many music videos and helped change the view of music forever.  Now a shadow of its former glory, MTV no longer hosts many music videos, despite having its own channel on cable television. The new way for the audience to view visual music is now through the internet and YouTube. This cultural shift as consumers between old technologies and new information allows us to make connections among dispersed media content.  “This circulation of media content – across different media systems, competing media economies, and national borders – depends heavily on consumers’ active participation” (Jenkins, 2006).

Youtube, and other online media broadcasters such as vevo and Netflix, allow consumers to view these visual productions free without any charge.  As Aoun states in his article iPod and YouTube and everyone we know:

“We only need to look at the words…YouTube…The ‘You’ attempts to acknowledge other talking heads and persons.” (Aoun, 2007)

This quote depicts how YouTube draws in their audience, by allowing them to “acknowledge other talking heads and persons” and thus sharing and circulating the media content to cause the convergence it aims to achieve through “active participation.”

Nicholas Negroponte (cited by Jenkins, 2006) stated that “What will happen to broadcast television over the next five years is so phenomenal that it’s difficult to comprehend.” This is true for any form of technology or media.  This can be seen by how everything has begun to be “digitized” the “old-fashioned” paperback book will no longer be in print, only to be taken over by e-readers. In the Music industry it is more prominent. We can see the quickly shifting developments of technology and how music was quickly adapted to fit each style.  First it was live and then came the vinyl records, the floppy disc, the CD, the mini disc, the usb, the iPod and now the internet on-the-go through media websites such as YouTube.

The internet brings “the flow of media more fully under the control…. Of users. They are fighting for the right to participate more fully in their culture to control the flow of media on their daily lives and to talk back” (Jenkins, 2004). As stated above, convergence is not just a technological change, but a social, cultural and economic change. With the ever-shifting enhancements in technology, we can see how media convergence is necessary to keep up with the demand of consumers.

 
Reference List:

Readings
Dwyer.T. (2010) Media Convergence, McGraw Hill, Berkshire, pp. 1-23
Jenkins, H (2006) Convergence Culture: Where Old and New Media Collide. NY university press
Hilderbrand, L (2007) YouTube: Where Cultural Memory and Copyright Converge, Film Quarterly, Vol 61, pp. 48-57
Baxter, R; Riemer, C; Landini, A. (1985) A content analysis of music videos, Journal of Broadcasting and Electronic Media, Volume 29, issue 3 pp. 333-340
Aoun, S (2007) iPod and YouTube and everyone we know, Metro, Issue 152, pp 166-175
Jenkins, H (2004) The cultural logic of media convergence, International journal of cultural studies. Vlolume 7 issue 1 pp33-43

Videos
Did You Know 3.0 (Officially updated for 2012) HD http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YmwwrGV_aiE [viewed 23rd August 2012]

Images
[Accessed 25th August 2012] Music bussiness degree at http://www.musicbusinessdegree.net/home/the-modern-world-of-the-music-business/
[Accessed 28th August 2012] Countdown begins (2011) at http://beccasbyline.wordpress.com/2011/10/26/the-countdown-begins/

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