What is Media Consolidation and Why Should Anyone Care? - BillMoyers (2024)

What is Media Consolidation and Why Should Anyone Care? - BillMoyers (1)

Vice President Al Gore speaks as President Bill Clinton looks on during an informal discussion with parents and children in Alexandria, Virginia on Feb. 9, 1996. Clinton had signed the Telecommunications Act the previous day. (Photo by Paul J. Richards/AFP/Getty Images)

Earlier this week, we wrote about a pending deal between Sinclair Broadcasting and Tribune Media. Sinclair hopes to buy Tribune, a move that will allow the company to broadcast news to 70 percent of Americans.

But the deal has raised eyebrows. The company is notoriously close with Trump, and also favored George W. Bush when he was president. The company’s DC office produces conservative commentary and news segments that paint Republicans in a favorable light, and distributes them to local stations around the country. Some worry that Sinclair hopes to create a competitor to Fox News, operating out of local television stations across America.

If the deal does go through — anti-trust regulators and the FCC will have to approve it — it will only have been possible because earlier this year, Trump’s FCC chair Ajit Pai relaxed rules preventing media consolidation. Like much the FCC deals with — net neutrality, internet privacy — media consolidation is a dull-sounding topic that is nonetheless very important. It has a direct hand in the quality of American journalism, and it dictates how accountable that journalism is to its audience.

We put together an explainer on the topic. Here’s what you need to know.


What is media consolidation?

Media consolidation is the concentration of ownership of our news sources into the hands of fewer and fewer corporations.


Why should I care about it?

One of the few things the American people agree on is that the mainstream media is woefully inadequate. According to a 2016 Gallup poll, only about 20 percent of Americans have confidence in the television news and in newspapers. Donald Trump effectively harnessed this distrust during his campaign, and still attacks the media before his fans when he wants to prompt applause.

Americans recognize that the media does not represent their views, and media consolidation is largely to blame. In the early 1980s, journalist Ben Bagdikian calculated that the majority of US media was held by just 50 corporations — and the number has dropped to only a handful since then.

This means that national and even local news coverage priorities are dictated from afar —
and by business leaders, not by journalists on the ground. It means that as print and broadcast journalism struggles to remain profitable in the face of free, online alternatives, hard financial decisions that affect reporters and the stories they tell will be made in corporate boardrooms. And it assures that some issues — issues in which corporate America is uninterested — go uncovered, while some voices — particularly female, minority and immigrant voices — rarely make it into print or onto the airwaves.


How did it happen?

From the time the Federal Communications Commission was created in 1934, through the 1970s, the US government largely acted to preserve media diversity and prevent media consolidation, putting in place regulations that discouraged any one corporation from owning too many newspapers or television stations or from reaching too large an audience. “The widest possible dissemination of information from diverse and antagonistic sources is essential to the welfare of the public,” Supreme Court Justice Hugo Black wrote in 1945, blocking a merger between the Associated Press and other newspaper publishing companies. It was a popular viewpoint at the time — preventing media consolidation was seen as strengthening the First Amendment.

But in the 1980s, Ronald Reagan’s FCC Chairman Mark Fowler brought a new, deregulatory view into vogue, and the federal government’s efforts to prevent media consolidation began to unravel. A watershed moment came a decade later, when Bill Clinton’s decision to sign the Telecommunications Act of 1996 handed lobbyists a major victory. The law was a massive dose of deregulation that dramatically raised caps on the number of local newspapers and television stations a single corporation could own, and the percentage of the national audience a single corporation could reach.

In a way, the media’s coverage of the Telecommunications Act of 1996 illustrated the perils of a corporate media. “The three big networks that were really dominant then basically didn’t cover the bill,” Zeynep Tufekci, a sociology professor and writer on the internet, politics and society, told the public radio program Marketplace last year. “They just kind of ignored it.”

When corporations control media coverage, they can keep the public in the dark about legislation that hurts the public interest but helps their bottom line.


Now that we have online news, does media consolidation really matter?

Short answer: Yes.

Even though many people now get their news online, a recent Pew Research Center study found that 57 percent of Americans get their news from television, 25 percent from radio and 20 percent from newspapers. Further, many online outlets are owned or funded by the same large media corporations.

Importantly, it’s businesses and politicians in our local communities that have the greatest impact on our lives. Increasingly, however, journalists at local broadcasters and newspapers are having their priorities dictated by corporations with little knowledge of the communities they cover. The gap left behind is one that most online outlets won’t fill. For all the great journalism that sites like Buzzfeed, Vox and Talking Points Memo (to name a few we follow) produce on federal lawmaking and international corporations, these outlets do not have a reporter covering city hall or the leaky chemical tank at the local manufacturing plant.

Columbia Journalism Review’s latest issue looks at the state of local news and the growing problem of local news deserts. Media consolidation has the effect of squelching local reporting in favor of syndicated reports. Mother Jones reported in 2014 that only 1 in 4 local TV stations actually produce their own content.

“You have these viewing choices across local stations, but you don’t really have alternatives if they are presenting the same thing,” media researcher Danilo Yanich of the University of Delaware told Pew. “That’s what’s wrong with it.”

What is Media Consolidation and Why Should Anyone Care? - BillMoyers (2)

Courtesy of Columbia Journalism Review


What’s going on under Trump?

Trump’s FCC Chairman Ajit Pai is excited to deregulate further. “There are synergies that are possible that our rules need to make sure we don’t prohibit pre-emptively,” he said in March.

One corporate favor he has offered up is a proposal to unwind net neutrality provisions. Net neutrality isn’t directly related to media consolidation, but — like the Telecommunications Act of 1996 — the coverage of net neutrality illustrates the perils of corporate media. This issue, while perennially one that motivates activists, often receives very little news coverage. This may be because, as Tufekci theorized on Marketplace, some of the companies that allocate budgets for newsrooms also deliver information via the internet and thus have a stake in the net neutrality debate. Comcast, an internet service provider, recently merged with NBC Universal, which, in turn, has a stake in or partnerships with many other media brands.

Even more relevant to this discussion, however, are Pai’s efforts to relax media ownership laws further. He has already started to do so; as a result, Sinclair Broadcasting, a company that owns local news stations, is planning to buy Tribune media, giving the company control over more than 200 stations.

If that happens, these stations’ local news coverage would be another victim of media consolidation.

Update: This post initially stated a figure form a New York Times article – that only six corporations control 90 percent of media. While it is true that several corporations control the majority of US media, the exact percentage is not that high, according to the watchdog group Free Press.

What is Media Consolidation and Why Should Anyone Care? - BillMoyers (2024)

FAQs

What is media consolidation? ›

Concentration of media ownership, also known as media consolidation or media convergence, is a process wherein fewer individuals or organizations control shares of the mass media.

What is media consolidation quizlet? ›

Concentration of media ownership (also known as media consolidation or media convergence) is a process whereby progressively fewer individuals or organizations control increasing shares of the mass media.

Why is it important to have diversity in media ownership? ›

Diversity of opinion is best ensured through diversity of ownership. As outlined in section 1, the media plays an important role in a democracy by prompting consideration of social, political and cultural issues. The best protection against undue influence is to ensure that consumers have access to many opinions.

Who owns media companies? ›

We find that almost universally the largest media firms are owned by the government or by private families. Government ownership is more pervasive in broadcasting than in the printed media.

What is consolidation and why is IT important? ›

To consolidate (consolidation) is to combine assets, liabilities, and other financial items of two or more entities into one. Consolidation is the phase in the industry life cycle where companies begin to merge or acquire each other, reducing the number of individual companies.

What is consolidate media? ›

If the media being used in a project, event, or library is located in multiple folders or on multiple storage devices, you can consolidate all the media in one location, on one storage device. This process facilitates archiving and makes it easier for others to access the media (using shared storage, for example).

What are the benefits of diversity in the media? ›

Diversity brings new perspectives.

When you are telling a story, you need to focus on how it will be perceived. Actively seeking out answers to difficult questions surrounding diversity will introduce new ways of viewing information.

What is owned media and why is it important? ›

Owned media is any content or channel that you create and control yourself. This could include a website, blog, social media profile, email list, or even a physical mailing list. As the business owner, you have complete control over this content and can use it to promote your products or services however you see fit.

Why is it important to value diversity among individuals? ›

It is important to value diversity because: people build a stronger sense of identity and wellbeing, and have better education and career outcomes when their diverse strengths, abilities, interests and perspectives are understood and supported.

What is the largest media company in the US? ›

Examples by country. In the 2023 Forbes Global 2000 list, Comcast is the United States' largest media conglomerate, in terms of revenue, with The Walt Disney Company, Warner Bros.

Are CNN and Fox owned by the same parent company? ›

Fox News is owned by Fox Media which is owned by Fox Corporation. The primary shareholders of Fox Corporation are Vanguard (6.4%), BlackRock (5.4%), and Dodge & Cox (4.8%). Overall, 56% of shares are controlled by financial institutions (559). CNN is owned by Warner Bros Discovery.

What media is owned by billionaires? ›

Time magazine, The Washington Post and The Los Angeles Times — owned by Marc Benioff, Jeff Bezos and Dr. Patrick Soon-Shiong — are still losing money. There's an old saying about the news business: If you want to make a small fortune, start with a large one.

What is the meaning of consolidation? ›

1. : the act or process of consolidating : the state of being consolidated. 2. : the process of uniting : the quality or state of being united. specifically : the unification of two or more corporations by dissolution of existing ones and creation of a single new corporation.

Is consolidation good or bad for stocks? ›

You do not lose money if shares are consolidated. On the contrary, your investment's value will improve after consolidation. But there is still a chance that the value of your shares will not change or even decrease in the short term.

What are examples of consolidation? ›

In other words, it's when two companies (or more) merge and become one. Many of the world's largest corporations were formed by business consolidation, while more recent examples include Facebook's acquisition of Instagram and Disney's acquisition of Fox.

What is media consolidation and convergence? ›

Media convergence is a term for two things: 1) It is when different media merge through technology. This is also known as technological convergence. 2) It is also when companies own different media outlets as part of a business strategy.

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