Media stories carry mil¬lions of people, in all life spheres, to the military and political fronts. They provide them with significant place for presidential ceremonies or football contests. They enable the public to socialize among themselves by sharing political experiences, exchanging information about particular political leaders, such as watching political discussions, parliament debates or senatorial investigations. Such involvements thus form public opinions about policies, shape views of officials and incite political actions.
Types of media, such as visual, audio and print, on numerous occasions act as behavior and standpoint picture. The figures that media construct indicate which attitudes and behaviors are …show more content…
The professional and personal politician’s behaviors, political occurrences beyond the bounds of hometown, frantic trade at stock exchanges, medical advancements, collective corruption, and institutions behaving bad, international affairs are not commonly shown from the original source or direct from the firsthand. Substantially, public perceptions of these events are skewed generally from news and fictional stories by the media. Like cartoons, media articles in many instances fabricate inexact impressions because they are incapable of covering the stories sufficiently; in detail or full meaning. For instance, local televisions huge focus on crime news and fiction story articles; create the impression that the viewers are more likely to become a victim of crime. Therefore, in reality crime is declining excessively and probabilities are …show more content…
For example, in United States an average person today watches more TV then time spent in school, especially during his or her elementary school days. Media, even in schools, are the cornerstones for informing them about the events. An average American, almost in half of her or his free time, watches television, listens to the radio, reads a newspaper and magazines, or surfs the Internet. Estimated within a week, this proves to be more than seven hours of display per day to some types of mass media news or entertainment. Transmitted over the air, via cable, through the Internet or through a videotape recorder, television seizes three-fourths of this time. Television remains the main news consumption medium despite the huge discontent and various complains about the quality of television programs in all these forms mentioned above. In late 2008, to a national study, fifty-two percent of people claimed to have watched local television news the day before. Furthermore, 34 percent said that they had read a daily newspaper the day before, and 35 percent asserted that they had paid attention to radio news (Pew Research Center