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Kandungan lecture 2. 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Konsep asas KMModel komunikasi dan KMSejarah dan perkembangan KMAntarabangsaMalaysiaMedia cetak dan elektronik di Malaysia. Basic Terms. CommunicationThe term communication has many meanings, and has been used to refer to interaction between animals and machines as well as people.Messages might be entertainment, information, or persuasion; they might be verbal or visual, intentional or unintentional..
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1. Pn Rosmiza Bidin 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved
Pengenalan Komunikasi Massa –Lecture 2
2. 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved
3. Basic Terms
Communication
The term communication has many meanings, and has been used to refer to interaction between animals and machines as well as people.
Messages might be entertainment, information, or persuasion; they might be verbal or visual, intentional or unintentional.
4. Basic Terms Communication
Interpersonal communication usually refers to individuals interacting face-to-face, and includes the study of intrapersonal communication, or thought patterns that make up internal conversations we have with ourselves.
Feedback: is defined as messages that return from the receiver of a message to the source of that message.
Noise: is defined as anything that interferes with the communication process.
5. Basic Terms Mediated Communication
Messages conveyed through a medium rather than face-to-face.
Print media are books, magazines, and newspapers.
Broadcast media are television and radio.
Digital media are computers, the World Wide Web, cell phones, and video games.
Entertainment media are all of the above plus movies and recordings.
6. Basic Terms Mass Communication
Mediated messages transmitted to large, usually widespread audiences.
Mass communication has potential for far greater impact than interpersonal communication.
7. Basic Terms Mass Communication
Feedback is restricted in most forms of mass communication.
In mass communication there is little or no feedback from individual audience members to the sender of messages.
8. Basic Terms Sponsors, editors, producers, reporters, and media executives are gatekeepers who determine what messages will be delivered, how they will be constructed and when they will be delivered.
9. Basic Terms Basic Model of Human Communication.
10. Basic Terms Traditional Model of Mass Communication
11. Basic Terms
12. Basic Terms Converged Media Model of Communication
13. Basic Terms Converging Communication Media
Convergence is merging of technologies, industries, and content.
The convergence of technologies refers to the merging of computer, telephone, and mass media technologies, such as Blackberries, Treos, and multiuse cell phones.
The convergence of industries refers to the idea of corporate mergers that allow companies to combine their media technologies, such as a cable TV company acquiring Internet and telephone divisions.
14. Basic Terms Converging Communication Media
The convergence of content is a natural extension of technological convergence.
It involves the bringing together of mediated interpersonal messages, including telephone and e-mail, with the messages of traditional mass communication, such as text and television e.g. the social networking site Facebook.
15. Media History Technology and Change: The Telegraph
New media technology has changed society at many points in history.
Telegraph introduced in 1844 by Samuel Morse.
16. Media History Milestones in Media History timeline
17. Media History Inverted pyramid style of news writing was response to telegraph’s unreliability.
In the inverted pyramid style of news writing, the most important facts (who, what, when, where and how) are squeezed into the first paragraphs of the story.
18. Media History The Associated Press was formed in 1848 when six New York newspapers agreed to share one correspondent in Boston.
The AP eventually became a nationwide association in which hundreds of papers shared their local news and correspondents.
Journalistic objectivity began when competing newspapers with divergent viewpoints shared one correspondent.
19. Understanding Today’s Media Industry American Media Products Dominate the Global Scene
Freedom of expression in the U.S. allows a wide range of movies, books, and other media products to be created on a variety of topics.
The American notion of freedom has been embraced internationally.
When children are exposed to violence and pornography many critics consider media freedom in the U.S. to be a mixed blessing.
20. Understanding Today’s Media Industry U.S. media is produced for a diverse audience that incorporates a wide range of backgrounds and tastes.
The U.S. is admired for technological achievements. People in most countries enjoy U.S. movies, music, and television programs.
Many countries accuse the U.S. of cultural imperialism.
U.S. ideas and customs are often disliked and seen as the ultimate propaganda weapon.
21. Understanding Today’s Media Industry Foreign Media in the U.S.
Foreign companies have purchased a considerable portion of U.S. media.
French, Italian and Chinese films, among others, are often of exceptional quality and inspire American directors.
British pop groups and British television have been extremely influential in the U.S.
22. Understanding Today’s Media Industry Reasons for Corporate Media Growth
Economies of scale are the savings that come with mass production.
Synergy refers to any combination of forces that results in a whole that is more than the sum of its parts.
NBC Television bought the Spanish cable network Telemundo to combine NBC’s programming executives with Telemundo’s experts in reaching the international Spanish-speaking audience.
23. Understanding Today’s Media Industry Not all plans for synergy work out.
AOL merged with Time-Warner for the synergies that would result when AOL’s Internet experts began working with Time-Warner’s information and entertainment experts.
The merger cost stockholders billions of dollars as AOL’s business lost value and Time-Warner could do nothing to help it.
24. Understanding Today’s Media Industry Cross merchandizing or cross promotion is another form of synergy.
Movie studios buy publishing houses so they can sell their stories in both movie and print form.
Television networks purchase much of their programming from movie studios.
Radio stations are largely dependent upon recorded music.
25. Understanding Today’s Media Industry Global competition favors larger companies
Most movies, books, records, and television programs lose money.
Most new magazines fail within a year or two.
New products have to be developed constantly.
When a product becomes a moneymaker the corporation has to exploit it in as many markets as possible.
Time Warner produced blockbuster films and best-selling toys based on characters from the fantastically successful Harry Potter books.
26. Understanding Today’s Media Industry Groups and Conglomerates
One way that media companies grow is through group ownership (also called chain ownership).
Many newspapers, television and radio stations, movie studios and movie theaters are part of a group where one company owns the same type of medium in more than one market area.
Conglomerates are large companies involved in many different types of businesses.
Most conglomerates form through a combination of vertical integration, horizontal integration.
27. Understanding Today’s Media Industry Vertical Integration
Vertical Integration occurs when companies own both production and distribution facilities, as in any of the columns above.
28. Understanding Today’s Media Industry Horizontal Integration
Horizontal Integration occurs when a company owns many different types of businesses, as in any of the columns above.
29. Understanding Today’s Media Industry Media Conglomerates
A media conglomerate describes companies that own large numbers of companies in various mass media such as television, radio, publishing, movies, and the Internet. It is also referred to as media institutions and media groups.
As of 2009, in terms of Revenue, The Walt Disney Company is the world's largest media conglomerate, with Time Warner and News Corporation ranking second and third respectively
31. Understanding Today’s Media Industry Microsoft has a global monopoly because more that 90 percent of all computers are equipped with one of their Windows operating systems.
An oligopoly is a small number of companies that dominate an industry. Six movie studios produce 90 percent of U.S. film revenues. Four major music companies receive 80 percent of recording revenues.
Some media are owned by entrepreneurs who start local newspapers, book publishing houses, magazines, small independent movie companies, and advertising agencies.
32. Understanding Today’s Media Industry Media and governments around the world
In communist countries such as China, North Korea, and Cuba the media is owned and operated by the government.
The great majority of countries in the world have either a government owned or government controlled media system.
The U.S. has a mixed model in which most media are privately owned but regulated by the government.
33. Understanding Today’s Media Industry Media and the audience
Writers, editors, directors and producers might have a particular message in mind but the audience decides what the final meaning is.
All media products survive by audience preference.
Audience acceptance establishes new technology.
Audience members wield power when they band together as consumer groups.
34. Media Controversies Impact issues deal with how the media affect society and how they affect individuals within society.
Legal issues deal with media practices that are governed by law such as libel, invasion of privacy, and antitrust actions.
Ethical issues deal with the idea of whether certain media practices are right or wrong from a moral point of view.
Impact, legal, and ethical issues are related.
35. Sejarah Media Malaysia Media Cetak
1805 Akhbar Inggeris pertama “The Prince of Wales”
1845 “The Straits Times”
Melaporkan berita mengenai Eropah dan menjadi rujukan kepada para peniaga dan golongan tertentu sahaja.
Akhabr lain :The Malayan Tribune, Sabah Times, North Borneo News etc
36. Sejarah Media Malaysia Media Cetak
1876 Akhbar melayu “Jawi Peranakan”
1957 “Utusan Melayu” (Singapura)
1967 “Utusan Malaysia” dilancarkan
Penyebar semangat nasionalisme Melayu pada zaman sebelum merdeka
37. Sejarah Media Malaysia Media Cetak
1815 “Chinese Monthly Magazine” untuk sebar Kristian, haram di China 1822
1881 “Lat Pau” pertama bahasa Cina
1923 “Nanyang Siang Pau” dan “Sin Chew Jit Poh” untuk iklan barangan
Kesedaran politik mendalam terutama mengenai Tanah Besar China
38. Sejarah Media Malaysia Media Cetak
1875 “Singai Warthanani”
1960 “Tamil Malar” “Thinamani” “Tamil Osai”
Semasa pendudukan Jepun, kesemua akhbar dihentikan penerbitan
39. Sejarah Media Malaysia 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved Media Elektronik
1921 radio Malaysia bermula. Johor Wireless Society – freq 300 meter
1930 penyiaran gelombang pendek 2x semingu
The Malayan Wireless Society 3x seminggu dr Bukit Petaling freq lebih 325 meter
Inggeris – The Malayan Broadcasting Authority
Jepun di Perang Dunia Kedua – hentikan semua
1946 – Jabatan Penyiaran Radio tertubuh apabila British kembali berkuasa
40. Media Cetak Malysia Kesampaian (reach) media kepada hampir 14 juta penduduk Malaysia berumur 15 tahun ke atas pada 2007
- TV (keseluruhan) 93.4 %
- TV biasa (FTA) 83.4 %
- Radio 79.4 %
- TV berbayar 31.7 %
- Akhbar 55.1 %
41. - Majalah 27.3 %
- Internet 18.3 %
- Power screen 3.8 %
- Panggung wayang 4.2 %
(Media Planning Guide 2008)
42. Penerbitan akhbar Pada tahun 2007 terdapat:
- 18 akhbar Bahasa Inggeris
- 17 akhbar Bahasa Cina
- 13 akhbar Bahasa Melayu
- 3 akhbar Bahasa Tamil
- 1 akhbar Bahasa Jepun
(harian dan Ahad)
43. Edaran akhbar 2007 Bahasa Melayu
Mingguan Malaysia 459,793
Berita Minggu 305,256
Metro Ahad 314,321
Harian Metro 289,315
Utusan Malaysia 197,033
Berita Harian 192,917
Kosmo! Ahad 109,892
Kosmo! 108,798
44. Bahasa Inggeris
Sunday Star 322,741
Star 309,181
Sun (percuma) 256,486
New Sunday Times 153,409
New Straits Times 139,763
Malay Mail 20,816
45. Bahasa Cina
Sin Chew Daily 357,163
China Press 231,539
Guang Ming Daily 186,904
Nanyang Siang Pau 114,049
Oriental Daily News 102,500
Kwong Wah Yit Poh 70,581
46. Pembaca akhbar 2007 Bahasa Melayu
Harian Metro 1,981,000 6.8
Metro Ahad 1,964,000 6.2
Mingguan Malaysia 1,854,000 4.0
Berita Minggu 1,453,000 4.8
Berita Harian 1,271,000 6.6
Utusan Malaysia 1,099,000 5.6
Kosmo! 406,000 3.7
Kosmo! Ahad 269,000 2.4
47. Bahasa Inggeris
Star 1,122,000 3.6
Sunday Star 1,014,000 3.1
New Straits Times 330,000 2.4
New Sunday Times 295,000 1.9
Sun (percuma) 218,000 0.8
Malay Mail 49,000 2.4
48. Bahasa Cina
Sin Chew Daily 1,170,000 3.2
China Press 659,000 2.8
Guang Ming Daily 400,000 2.1
Nanyang Siang Pau 250,000 2.2
Kwong Wah Yit Poh 249,000 3.5
49. Penerbitan majalah Pada tahun 2007 terdapat:
- 22 majalah diterbitkan setiap minggu
- 26 majalah diterbitkan 2 minggu 1X
- 177 majalah diterbitkan setiap bulan
- 42 majalah diterbitkan 2 bulan 1X
50. Pada tahun 2007 terdapat:
- 120 majalah B. Inggeris
- 80 majalah B. Melayu
- 62 majalah B. Cina
- 2 majalah B. Tamil
- 2 majalah B. Jepun
51. Pengedaran majalah 2007 Bahasa Melayu
- Mastika 234,720
- Mingguan Wanita 138,978
- Dewan Pelajar 130,000
- Dewan Siswa 110,000
- Mangga 101,568
- Bacaria 90,000
- Klik 90,000
52. Bahasa Inggeris
- Readers Digest 131,555
- Adsvantage 120,000
- Going Places 100,000
- KL Lifestyle 74,394
- Cine Fashion 72,000
- CLEO 56,094
- Female 50,000
53. Bahasa Cina
- Toyota Touch 180,000
- Ering 65,000
- Feminine 60,000
- Comic Weekly 60,000
- Mom Baby 48,000
- Nuyou 43,000
- Traveller’s Digest 42,576
- Mami Baby 42,000
54. Media Elektronik Malaysia Pada tahun 2007 terdapat 61 stesen radio di Malaysia (over the air), 29 stesen milik swasta
- 38 Bahasa Melayu
- 12 Bahasa Inggeris
- 4 Bahasa Cina
- 2 Bahasa Tamil
- 1 Bahasa Arab
55. Stesen kepunyaan kerajaan
- 5 nasional: Nasional (BM), Muzik (BM), Traxx (BI), AiFM (BC), Minnal (BT)
- 27 regional: 15 Semenanjung, 5 Sabah,
7 Sarawak
KLFM, Kedah FM, Terengganu FM, NSFM, Selangor FM, Perak FM, Perlis FM, Melaka FM, Mutiara FM, Asyik FM, Johor FM, Klasik FM, Langkawi FM, Kelantan dan Pahang
56. Sabah
- Sabah FM (BM, BI, BC, B Bajau, B Murut, B Dusun, B Kadazan), Tawau FM, Sandakan FM, Labuan FM dan Labuan FM
57. Sarawak
- Sarawak FM (BM, BI, BC, B Iban, B Bidayuh), Seri Aman FM, Sibu FM, Miri FM, Limbang FM, Red FM dan Wai FM
58. Radio swasta (over the air)
- Radio Wanita: Wanita FM
- Media Prima: Fly FM dan Hot FM
- Suara Johor: Best 104 (1st private station)
- STAR Rfm: 988 (BC), Red 104.9 (BM, BI)
- Husa Network: Manis FM (Kelantan)
- Kristal Harta: Cats Radio (Sarawak)
- Institut Kefahaman Islam M’sia: IKIM FM
- Bernama: Radio 24
- Capital: Capital Radio
59. Radio swasta (AMP over the air)
- ERA, THR, Sinar, Xfresh, Lite, Mix, Hitz dan MY
- Berbayar – Opus, Melody, Jazz, Osai, Classic Rock, Varia, Musiq’a, Nostalgia, Indian Beat, dan Golden Oldies
60. Radio swasta (over the air)
- Radio Wanita: Wanita FM
- Media Prima: Fly FM dan Hot FM
- Suara Johor: Best 104 (1st private station)
- STAR Rfm: 988 (BC), Red 104.9 (BM, BI)
- Husa Network: Manis FM (Kelantan)
- Kristal Harta: Cats Radio (Sarawak)
- Institut Kefahaman Islam M’sia: IKIM FM
- Bernama: Radio 24
- Capital: Capital Radio
61. Radio swasta (AMP over the air)
- ERA, THR, Sinar, Xfresh, Lite, Mix, Hitz dan MY
- Berbayar – Opus, Melody, Jazz, Osai, Classic Rock, Varia, Musiq’a, Nostalgia, Indian Beat, dan Golden Oldies
62. Pendengar radio kerajaan – 2007 Klasik nasional – 1,305,000
Muzik – 969,000
Kedah FM – 827,000
Kelantan – 769,000
Minnal – 614,000
AiFM – 574,000
Perak FM – 468,000
63. Pendengar radio swasta – 2007 ERA – 5,223,000
Hot – 3,964,000
THR – 2,670,000
Sinar – 2,387,000
MY – 2,203,000
988 – 1,536,000
Hitz – 1,297,000
64. Pada tahun 2007 terdapat 6 stesen TV biasa dan 1 stesen TV satelit dan 2 Internet TV:
- Kerajaan, RTM – TV1 & TV2,
- Swasta, Media Prima – TV3, nTV7, TV8 dan TV 9
- Satelit – Astro: 40 saluran TV
- Internet TV: murai.com, gua.com
65. Sasaran TV Media Prima TV 3 – Malay audience with progressive mindset
nTV 7 – Malaysian urban household, 25 – 45 years old, kids and Chinese
TV 8 – Young Malaysian urban, Chinese, 15 – 24 years old
TV 9 – ‘Traditional’ Malay audience
66. TV audience share – 2007 (13.9 mil.) TV 3 32.7 %
ASTRO 30.8 %
TV 2 8.9 %
TV 9 8.1 %
TV 1 7.7 %
nTV 7 6.5 %
TV 8 5.3 %
67. Pelanggan ASTRO 2,404,000 (Sept. 07)
Pada 2007 ASTRO melabur RM141j untuk menyiarkan 26 % rancangan terbitan tempatan dan 74 % rancangan import
Awal 2008 ASTRO menerbitkan 3,894 jam rancangan tempatan
Kini ASTRO mempunyai lebih 110 saluran
68. Jumlah rancangan TV seminggu (Ogos 2002) Item/Stesen TV1 TV2 TV3 nTV7
Jumlah ranc. 261 184 236 215
Jumlah masa (jam) 132 111 137 127
Ranc hiburan (% masa) 36.5 60.5 57.2 55.0
Ranc maklumat 23.3 38.2 18.8 20.9
Berita 19.0 10.5 12.0 9.9
69. ASTRO Astro
Satu konsortium yg dimiliki oleh T.Ananda Krishnan
Shareholders Khazanah Nasional Berhad, Bumiputra Trust, Usaha Tegas Entertainment Systems Sdn Bhd
Satu kump. Multimedia, satelit tv (DTH satellite pay tv), Radio Broadcasting dan juga ‘magazine publishing operations’
Moto ‘Mempesonakan Kehidupan’Astro
Satu konsortium yg dimiliki oleh T.Ananda Krishnan
Shareholders Khazanah Nasional Berhad, Bumiputra Trust, Usaha Tegas Entertainment Systems Sdn Bhd
Satu kump. Multimedia, satelit tv (DTH satellite pay tv), Radio Broadcasting dan juga ‘magazine publishing operations’
Moto ‘Mempesonakan Kehidupan’
70. Sistem Astro Sistem satelit – MEASAT (Malaysia East Asia Satellite)
dilancarkan pada 13 January 1996
Menggunakan (KU-band spot beams)
Meliputi seluruh Malaysia, South Asia, East Asia merangkumi India, Philipines, Vietnam, Indonesia, Taiwan, S’pore dan juga Brunei
Sistem ‘KU-band spot beams’ membolehkan ia ‘target specific markets’
Pusat Khidmat Astro – All Asia Broadcast Centre (ABC), Bukit Jalil.Sistem satelit – MEASAT (Malaysia East Asia Satellite)
dilancarkan pada 13 January 1996
Menggunakan (KU-band spot beams)
Meliputi seluruh Malaysia, South Asia, East Asia merangkumi India, Philipines, Vietnam, Indonesia, Taiwan, S’pore dan juga Brunei
Sistem ‘KU-band spot beams’ membolehkan ia ‘target specific markets’
Pusat Khidmat Astro – All Asia Broadcast Centre (ABC), Bukit Jalil.
71. Sistem ‘KU-band spot beams’ membolehkan ia ‘target specific markets’ dan mengelakkan ‘Outage’
‘Life Span’ – 12 tahun
Pusat Khidmat Astro – All Asia Broadcast Centre (ABC), Bukit Jalil.
72. Perkhidmatan 40 siaran televisyen
16 channel radio
5 FM radio dalam digital format
Aplikasi Interaktif meliputi
Astro Stocklink
TV SMS
Pay Per View (Season Pass)
Distant Learning
Home Shopping
Home Banking
Downloads Capabilities
40 siaran televisyen
16 channel radio
5 FM radio dalam digital format
Aplikasi Interaktif meliputi
Astro Stocklink
TV SMS
Pay Per View (Season Pass)
Distant Learning
Home Shopping
Home Banking
Downloads Capabilities
73. Astro telah mencapai ‘target’ 1,000,000 pengguna pada Mei 2003.
Hasil promosi - One In A Million
Mengurangkan kadar pemasangan serta kadar bulanan
Pembayaran mudah melalui bank serta kad kredit
Memberikan program-program luar negara yg bermutu (Discovery Channel, Tech TV)
Program-program yang eksklusif (Anugerah Era, siaran langsung sukan)
Astro telah mencapai ‘target’ 1,000,000 pengguna pada Mei 2003.
Hasil promosi - One In A Million
Mengurangkan kadar pemasangan serta kadar bulanan
Pembayaran mudah melalui bank serta kad kredit
Memberikan program-program luar negara yg bermutu (Discovery Channel, Tech TV)
Program-program yang eksklusif (Anugerah Era, siaran langsung sukan)