gcse media: audience audience explained 'audience' is a very important concept throughout...
TRANSCRIPT
GCSE Media: Audience
Audience Explained
'Audience' is a very important concept throughout media studies. All media texts are made with an audience in mind, ie a group of people who will receive it and make some sort of sense out of it. And generally, but not always, the producers make some money
out of that audience. Therefore it is important to understand what happens when an audience "meets" a media text.
Constructing Audience
• When a media text is being planned, perhaps the most important question the producers consider is "Does it have an audience?" If the answer to this is 'no', then there is no point in going any further. If no one is going to watch/read/play/buy the text, the producers aren't going to make any money or get their message across. Audience research is a major part of any media company's work. They use questionnaires, focus groups, and comparisons to existing media texts, and spend a great deal of time and money finding out if there is anyone out there who might be interested in their idea.
• It's a serious business; media producers basically want to know the
• income bracket/status• age• gender• race• location• of their potential audience, a method of categorising known
as demographics. Once they know this they can begin to shape their text to appeal to a group with known reading/viewing/listening habits.
Understanding demographicsA Top management, bankers, lawyers, doctors and other highly salaried professionals
BMiddle management, teachers, many 'creatives' eg graphic designers etc
C1Office supervisors, junior managers, nurses, specialist clerical staff etc
C2 Skilled workers, tradespersons (white collar)
D Semi-skilled and unskilled manual workers (blue collar)
E Unemployed, students, pensioners, casual workers
They also consider very carefully how that audience might react to, or engage with, their text. The following are all factors in analysing or predicting this reaction.
AUDIENCE ENGAGEMENT
This describes how an audience interacts with a media text. Different people react in different ways to the same text.
AUDIENCE EXPECTATIONS
These are the advance ideas an audience may have about a text. This particularly applies to genre pieces. Don't forget that producers often play with or deliberately shatter audience expectations.
AUDIENCE FOREKNOWLEDGE
This is the definite information (rather than the vague expectations) which an audience brings to a media product.
AUDIENCE IDENTIFICATION
This is the way in which audiences feel themselves connected to a particular media text, in that they feel it directly expresses their attitude or lifestyle.
AUDIENCE PLACEMENT
This is the range of strategies media producers use to directly target a particular audience and make them feel that the media text is specially 'for them'.
AUDIENCE RESEARCH
Measuring an audience is very important to all media institutions. Research is done at all stages of production of a media text, and, once produced, audience will be continually monitored.
Audience reaction to even early versions of a media text is closely watched. Hollywood studios routinely show a pre-release version of every movie they make to a test audience, and will often make changes to the movie that are requested by that audience.
Creating Audience
• Once a media text has been made, its producers need to ensure that it reaches the audience it is intended for. All media texts will have some sort of marketing campaign attached to them. Elements of this might include
• posters• print, radio, TV and internet advertisements• trailers• promotional interviews (eg stars appearing on chat shows, information
leaked to Internet bloggers)• tie-in campaigns (eg a blockbuster movie using McDonalds meals)• merchandising (t-shirts, baseball caps, key rings).
• Marketing campaigns are intended to create awareness of a media text. Once that awareness has been created, hopefully audiences will come flocking in their hundreds of millions
Task
• Think of a ‘blockbuster’ film that you have seen and find merchandise and a trailer linked to it
• Eg : Monster’s University