Docsity
Docsity

Prepare for your exams
Prepare for your exams

Study with the several resources on Docsity


Earn points to download
Earn points to download

Earn points by helping other students or get them with a premium plan


Guidelines and tips
Guidelines and tips

UCLA Comm 178: Final Exam Questions with 100% Correct Answers | Verified | Updated 2024, Exams of Advanced Education

UCLA Comm 178: Final Exam Questions with 100% Correct Answers | Verified | Updated 2024 The definition of ideology of propagnda - Correct Answer--Looking for a set of beliefs, values, attitudes and behaviors Agitation and Interrogation - Correct Answer-Agitation: seeks to arouse people to participate in or support a cause interrogation: attempts to maintain positions and interests represented by "officials" who sponsor and sanction the propaganda messages Doob's identifications of a Propagandist - Correct Answer-source- institution or organization identity is usually concealed but easier to identify Model for Social Action - Correct Answer-A person can rise above difficult circumstances to become a leader who can make significant differences in people's lives What is culture? - Correct Answer-A culture is a system of informal rules that spell out how people are to behave most of the time. Hall used the word culture to "refer to whatever is distinctive about the way of lif

Typology: Exams

2023/2024

Available from 07/18/2024

professoraxel
professoraxel 🇺🇸

3.7

(29)

11K documents

1 / 28

Toggle sidebar

Related documents


Partial preview of the text

Download UCLA Comm 178: Final Exam Questions with 100% Correct Answers | Verified | Updated 2024 and more Exams Advanced Education in PDF only on Docsity!

UCLA Comm 178: Final Exam Questions

with 100% Correct Answers | Verified |

Updated 2024

The definition of ideology of propagnda - Correct Answer-- Looking for a set of beliefs, values, attitudes and behaviors Agitation and Interrogation - Correct Answer-Agitation: seeks to arouse people to participate in or support a cause interrogation: attempts to maintain positions and interests represented by "officials" who sponsor and sanction the propaganda messages Doob's identifications of a Propagandist - Correct Answer- source- institution or organization identity is usually concealed but easier to identify Model for Social Action - Correct Answer-A person can rise above difficult circumstances to become a leader who can make significant differences in people's lives

What is culture? - Correct Answer-A culture is a system of informal rules that spell out how people are to behave most of the time. Hall used the word culture to "refer to whatever is distinctive about the way of life of a people, community, nation or social group. Culture is equal to the set of social practices that incorporates and forms the shared values that arise among social groups based on their historical conditions and relationships. Structural Considerations for a successful propaganda campaign - Correct Answer-1.Leadership will be strong and centralized, with a hierarchy built into the organization

  1. The articulation of specific goals and how to achieve them.
  2. The selection of media used to send the propaganda message
  3. The organization can be examined to find out whether it has an apparent culture within itself
  4. The organization will also have a set of formal rules
  5. The structure of propaganda organizations also varies according to whether the communication is within the organization or directed to the public

Reaching a target audience - Correct Answer--The target audience is selected for potential effectiveness (pop-up ads, audience selection). -Modern marketing research enhanced by new technologies enables an audience to be targeted easily. Ex). Mailing and Internet lists A distribution system for media may generate its audience. A television program, film, webpage, or e-mail may attract a supportive audience. -Some organizations prefer a "buckshot" approach to a mass audience. Kecskemeti (1973) claimed that a strong propagandist could homogeneously work the message media with a consistent message. Some audience members accept the message more eagerly than others; some reject it. Main focus of media utilization - Correct Answer-The main focus should be on how the media are used -The propagandist might show a video and hand out leaflets afterward. This type of practice maximizes the potential of the media. Qualter's common slogan for the basic criteria for successful propaganda - Correct Answer-seen, understood, remembered and acted on

Ellul's creating resonance with the audience - techniques - Correct Answer--Need to create common views for it to be effective. -The propagandist uses BELIEF to create belief by linking or reinforcing audience predispositions to reinforce propagandistic ideology or, in some cases, to create new attitudes or behaviors or both. -Rather than try to change political loyalties, racial and religious attitudes, and other deeply held beliefs, the propagandist voices the propaganda's feelings about these things. Messages appear to be resonant, for they seem to be coming from within the audience rather than from without. Special Techniques to maximize effect - Correct Answer--Face to face contact- can be seen as a separate activity when you're accepting a message. -Meant to reiterate the message the film was trying to express -Rewards and punishment -Monopoly of a communication source -Visual symbols of power (logos and photographs are key ex. Hitler's speeches flags and banners and top officials everywhere showed power) -Language use

source credibility - Correct Answer--refers to a communicator's expertise, objectivity, or trustworthiness -Expert opinion is effective in establishing the legitimacy of change and is tied to information control. Once a source is accepted on one issue, another issue may be established as well based on prior acceptance of the source. group norms - Correct Answer--Shared guidelines or rules for behavior that most group members follow -The propagandist exploits people's conforming tendencies, and the analyst should look for examples of this. The propagandist may manipulate the environment to create crowded conditions to achieve a more homogeneous effect. ( i.e. large meetings in small halls) Music as Propaganda - Correct Answer--Arousal of emotions -Music is effective because it combines sound and language and is repeated until it becomes familiar. -Music is an effective propaganda technique because it touches the emotions easily, suggests associations and past experiences, invites us to sing along, and embraces ideology in the lyrics (ex: Yankee Doodle, National Anthems)

target audience - Correct Answer-the portion of the whole audience that the speaker most wants to persuade modern technology has made this easier Counterpropaganda - Correct Answer--In a free society or market where media is competitive -Handbills and graffiti are obvious, but other important forms of counterpropaganda are theater, literature, video, film, and websites. Twitter determination of propaganda as a process - Correct Answer-- Propaganda as a process is socially determined -A model of the propaganda process includes the social- historical context, a cultural rim made up of government, economy, events, ideology, and myths of society; the institution; propaganda agents; media methods; the social network; and the public cultural rim - Correct Answer--The cultural rim is the infrastructure that provides the material context in which messages are sent and received. --Elements: ideology, government, social practices

-How propaganda is developed, used, and received is culture specific. The elements of a culture—its ideologies, societal myths, government, economy, social practices, and specific events that take place—influence propaganda open and closed systems - Correct Answer-An open system continuously interacts with its environment, while a closed system is isolated from its surroundings. Propaganda Agents - Correct Answer-Propaganda agents are the people who facilitate messages directly and through the media for an institution. Sometimes, they are too powerful and charismatic figures. Other times they are bureaucrats or disseminators of information. Purpose: send out ideology with a specific objective to a target audience for the benefit of the institution. social network - Correct Answer-A social network is made up of opinion leaders who may influence an audience because of their position with the social network, small groups of people that may include opinion leaders, propaganda agents, or both, and people who facilitate rumors innocently or deliberately throughout a social network.

instituation - Correct Answer--An institution generally initiates and fosters propaganda because of its organizational and financial powers -The propaganda may be to maintain the institution's legitimacy, its position in society, and its activities Control over the media - Correct Answer--Depends on whether a society is open or closed -Closed society: some countries like North Korea deliberately prevent outside info from reaching citizens -Open society: tends to have more flexible, accessible media systems that accept or reject messages without having to refer to higher authorities -government dictates the flow of propaganda relative to the sale or consumption of goods Rampton's "Internet has Changed the Propaganda Model" Worthy versus Unworthy - Correct Answer--How treatment differs among victims of violence is a signature characteristic of propaganda (worthy vs. unworthy) -"A propaganda system will consistently portray people abused in enemy states as WORTHY victims, whereas those

treated with equal or greater severity by its own government or clients will be UNWORTHY Rampton's "Internet has Changed the Propaganda Model" Five Filters - Correct Answer-MEDIA OWNERSHIP The price of entry into internet publishing is dramatically lower than price of entry into traditional media On the internet, someone can set up their own website with its own domain name for a very low cost ADVERTISING The advertisers' choices influence media prosperity and survival DEF: Ad based media receive an advertising subsidy that gives them a price marketing quality edge which allows them to encroach on and further weaken their ad free rivals → On the internet, ad heavy websites may attract more revenue than ad free sites and Google ads are heavily relied on on the internet RELIANCE ON OFFICIAL SOURCES Internet has given rise to "citizen journalism" which assumes that any amateur can be a journalist and this reduces the credibility of sources bc almost anyone know can become a source, not just officials such as police or mayors

FLAK (produced by wealthy interest groups) Def: negative responses to a media statement or program → in the form of letters, telegraphs, phone calls, petitions, lawsuits, speeches, and bills and other modes of complaint, threat, and punitive action Many new internet media are sources of flak ANTI-COMMUNISM (as an ideological control mechanism) Has faded somewhat as a national ideology Much of this rhetoric is hidden in the language of "anti- terrorism" or "anti-islam" or more generally, anti-anti- americanism Should be seen as a broader filter → "nationalism ass an ideological control mechanism" Rampton's "Internet has Changed the Propaganda Model" Application of the model to war in Iraq - Correct Answer-In a chapter called "Not Counting the Dead" → even the US soldiers who have died or suffered injuries are included among the "unworthy victims" whose suffering is to be treated in a sanitized, MINIMAL way Some broadcast companies ordered their networks not to talk about the dead soldiers (this is an example of minimalism compared to photos published from other wars)

Coverage is even more limited when it comes to Iraqi victims The war in Iraq offers plenty of evidence showing that the information presented in U.S. media distorts reality in ways that garner support for the war Rampton's "Internet has Changed the Propaganda Model" Propaganda model's change on the internet - Correct Answer- There is a widespread belief that disinformation, deception, and propaganda pervade the media The Internet has challenged the propaganda model by increasing the number of channels through which information reaches the public Lowers the cost of entry to previously-excluded voices → changed the traditional distinction between "broadcaster" and "audience" McChesney"s Rich Media, Poor Democracy Ch 3 internet 2 - Correct Answer-Hardly intended to provide widespread public access, or even to be a "public service" alternative to the commercialized Web. The point of Internet 2 is to expedite research links between the corporate sector, high tech sector, and universities. Internet 2 is arguably more part of the process of corrupting the integrity of higher education than of protecting it.

McChesney"s Rich Media, Poor Democracy Ch 3 Advantage of Internet instilling fear on TV broadcasters - Correct Answer-The fear for the media forms is that the Internet will breed a new generation of commercial competitors who take advantage of the Internet's relatively low production and distribution costs, everything will be digitized McChesney"s Rich Media, Poor Democracy Ch 3

  1. Common forms of Internet Advertising - Correct Answer- Common form of internet advertising: sponsorship which is when an agency andhost web site work together to develop advertorials McChesney"s Rich Media, Poor Democracy Ch 3 Music giants - Correct Answer-Online music sales expected to be successful for e-commerce: music will be sent digitally to the computer rather than through CDs which should reduce prices -1998: copying and sending music digitally in MP formal becoming widespread Piracy becomes easy

Music industry will be first to test the "iceberg theory": Internet will introduce competition and break up existing oligopolistic media markets 5 music giants: Bertlesmann, Sony, Seagram, Time Warner, and EMI: in negotiation with ISPs and portals to sell their wares online McChesney"s Rich Media, Poor Democracy Ch 3 Corporate Giants and effect of broadband internet - Correct Answer-It is in times of upheaval, as with the Internet and digital communication, that brand new industries are being formed and there is an opportunity for new giants to emerge The role of small firms in the classic scenario is to conduct the research and development and experimentation that large firms find insufficiently profitable, and then, when one of them finds a lucrative new avenue, they sell out to an existing giant Some of the impetus for technological innovation comes from these small firms, eager to find a new niche in which they can grow away from the shadows of the corporate giants in existing industries McChesney"s Rich Media, Poor Democracy Ch 3

E-Commerce - Correct Answer--At its most effective, Internet advertising merges with e-commerce and uses the immense amount of information on consumers available on the Internet to locate potential customers, pitch a tailored spot to them, and conclude a sale immediately -This is ideal for most products, but it is hardly viable for the preponderance of advertising This will introduce new tensions to the media's perennial balancing act between editorial integrity and the bottom line Internet e-commerce is an area where size doesn't matter and matters a great deal; profit margins are very small so selling vast quantities is crucial for survival. A seller must also have a large enough stock so as to deliver books, videos, or CDs in a reasonable amount of time McChesney"s Rich Media, Poor Democracy Ch 3 Reaching a target audience - difficult or easy for the internet?

  • Correct Answer--The possibilities for extending and enhancing advertising are considerable -Digital will permit advertisers to pinpoint specific target audiences so that two households watching the same program could see "radically divergent" spots from the same advertiser -"It is a big thing and works best for advertising" - Malone

McChesney"s Rich Media, Poor Democracy Ch 3 Oligopolistic Markets - Correct Answer--This means that a small handful of firms-ranging from two or three to as many as a dozen or so-thoroughly dominate the market's output and maintain barriers to entry that effectively keep new market entrants at bay

  • In pricing and output, oligopolistic markets are far closer to being monopolistic markets than they are to being the competitive markets described in capitalist folklore McChesney"s Rich Media, Poor Democracy Ch 3 Clinton's support of commercialization - Correct Answer--Saw it as the key to economic growth less government involvement is the way to go Internet industry group provides industry self-regulation -Business interests are dominant -1998: Government will abandon Internet management -Global Internet Project: provides long term solutions to self- regulation Internet self-regulation -Most important policy fights are global Mander's Four Arguments for the Elimination of Television
  1. Elements for the creation of value through advertising - Correct Answer-Converting the natural into the artificial, something with no inherent economic value becomes "productive" in the capitalist sense. In economics, this transformation goes by the term value-added. The next element is establishing the notion of scarcity around your product. Next would be redeveloping humans to engage with the products through emotional appeal and perception. Understanding the commodity of people and breaking skin barriers by providing easily consumable processes. Lastly, buying ourselves back or artificial discontent to garner public approval, next one must understand the strategic forms of delivery systems and appeal to an audience. Mander's Four Arguments for the Elimination of Television
  2. Results of Confinement - Correct Answer-Example/ definition: Confinement itself, the removal of a creature from its natural habitat into a rearranged world where its ordinary techniques for survival and satisfaction are no longer operative, produces several inevitable results.
  1. The creature becomes dependent for survival upon whoever controls the new environment. It will use its intelligence to learn whatever new tricks are necessary to fit that system. If it takes tricks and changes to stay alive, then that's what it takes.
  1. The creature becomes focused upon (addicted to) whatever experiences remain available in the new environment.
  2. The creature therefore reduces its own mental and physical expectations to fit what can be gotten. Confined creatures that cannot fit this pattern go crazy, revolt or die. Mander's Four Arguments for the Elimination of Television
  1. Suburb-people - Correct Answer-If suburbs are capitalism's ideally separated buying units, and suburbs can be built profitably, then we must create humans who like and want suburbs: suburb-people. Since there were no suburb-people before the existence of suburbs, advertising has the task of creating them, in body and mind. Since before the creation of electric shavers or hair dryers or electric carving knives people felt no need for these things, the need was implanted into human minds by advertising. Mander's Four Arguments for the Elimination of Television
  2. Goal of Advertising - Correct Answer-Scarcity, the separation of people from whatever they might want or need. In artificial environments, where humans are separated from the sources of their survival, everything obtains a condition of relative scarcity and, therefore value. You may be living on the

exact spot where a fruit tree once fed people. Now the fruit comes from five hundred miles away and costs thirty-five cents a piece. It is in the separation that the opportunity for profit resides. Advertising's greatest delivery system - Correct Answer-A symbiotic relationship developed where advertising financed television's growth. Television was the greatest delivery system for advertising that had ever been invented. Trickle-down theory - definition and failure- - Correct Answer- The theory which is the basis of Keynesian American economics, has it that when people buy more and more commodities, they produce more profits for industry, enabling it to expand. When industry grows, more jobs result. This puts more money into circulation, allowing the people to buy more commodities, expanding profits again, yielding more investments, more jobs and starting the cycle around on another turn. Failure: The theory isolated, frustrated, alienated people. More importantly, the economic benefits did not trickle down to create some egalitarian democracy, the benefits trickled up. Maasik's Brought to You Buy

  1. Commodification - Correct Answer--Associating a logically unrelated desire with an actual product -Desire itself becomes the product The Hidden Persuaders - American shift from a producing country to a consuming one -Levi's Ad where the dog steal the woman's jeans -Often implies objectification of women Prose's In Reality TV and the Public Ethos
  2. Why is Reality TV more appealing? - Correct Answer-Reality tv is an improvisation that doles out consistent and reinforced lessons about human nature and reality. It generates a jittery adrenalized buzz that produces a paradoxically tranquilized numbness i which our defences relax and leave us more receptive to the "information" we are receiving" (reader 230) Wasiak's How Social Media Has Radically Altered Advertising
  3. "Me the People" mindset - Correct Answer--A mindset like this changes the way companies strategize, organize, monetize, and commercialize their business How far a "me the people movement can go" → having a one- on-one relationship with 7 billion people in the world and be able to customize offerings for those people

-Digital allows that relationship -Social media has changed the way people interact amongst themselves and with their media → playing multiple roles as receivers, creators, critics...etc -Businesses need a people strategy Von Hoffman's Super Bowl Advertising

  1. What is Social Media's Impact on Super Bowl Advertising? - Correct Answer--It's making the event into a week-long effort to connect with consumers and build buzz around super bowl ads and the brands themselves -Advertisers are offering up versions of their Super Bowl ads, either teasers or the actual ads, or longer versions of the ads before the game even airs -Advertisers are trying to strike a balance between teasing out the actual commercials and the big reveal/impact of their super bowl commercial -Social media is making it more important that ads make an impact on the TV and are then talked about online and on social media Mason's Twitter Effect: How the Hashtag Has Shaped Political Debate
  1. Why are hashtags so unique according to Andrew Walker? - Correct Answer-In any networked environment it is difficult for you to get your nuances across, your tone of voice. They let you describe your tweet but they also enable you to turn it into satire or comedy or make an oblique point," Mr Walker says.
  2. Why do politicians use it as a political tool? - Correct Answer-It's divisive and "the hashtag is a vital tool at the heart of an increasingly mainstream platform for conversation amongst the political classes. And so for that reason it matters, whether we as individuals want to embrace it or not." The Economist's Sweet to Tweet: Twitter makes politicians seem more accessible. To matter, it needs to change their behavior Why do politicians turn to Twitter? - Correct Answer-Twitter makes politicians more accessible Easier for voters to reach politicians and for politicians to react to them Works well for extrovert and conscientious politicians High risk due to permanency in a public forum More politicians playing it safe

An ill-judged tweet can do severe instant damage Politicians become more relatable to everyday people Thompson's The Facebook Effect on the News

  1. What is considered newsworthy on Facebook according to Thompson? - Correct Answer--"Evergreen" Stories - Stories that are always relevant -Diets, millennials, happiness, beautiful photos -Not current news, but leads to high-arousal of emotions Georgia Institute of Technology's Four telltale signs of Propaganda on Twitter
  2. Extreme Democracy - Correct Answer-Ex: Twitter → everyone is a publisher, and people can say whatever they want with no rejection or limit It is complete freedom of expression
  3. Hyperadvocacy - Correct Answer-A politically neutral term that refers simply to those users and content that are consistently biased toward a specific point of view, without necessarily having malicious or subversive intent

Ex: hyper advocates are those who retweeted predominately messages of users in the same cluster "Blame the Echo Chamber on Facebook, but Blame Yourself Too,"

  1. 2010/2014 I-Tunes Study - Correct Answer-Evaluated media consumption patterns of more than 1,700 iTunes users who were shown personalized content recommendations. The analysis measured the overlap in media consumed by users---in other words, the extent to which two randomly selected users consumed media in common. If users were fragmenting due to the personalized recommendations, the overlap in consumption across users would decrease after they start receiving recommendations. Recommendations turned on - overlap in media consumption increased for all users - why?
  2. users simply consumed more media when an algorithm found relevant media for them. If two users consumed twice as much media, then the chance of them consuming common content also increased.
  3. algorithmic recommendations helped users explore and branch into new interests, thereby increasing overlap with others. In short, we didn't find evidence for an echo chamber.

Political content different from other forms of media - do these results generalize to social media?

  1. Cross-cutting - Correct Answer-cross-cutting: defined as a user sharing a perspective other than their own (for example, a liberal reading a news story with a primarily conservative perspective). 3 factors influence the extent to which we see cross-cutting news
  2. Who our friends are and what stories they share
  3. Among all the news stories shared by friends, which ones are displayed by the newsfeed algorithm
  4. Which of the displayed news stories we actually click on If the second factor is the primary driver of the echo chamber, then Facebook deserves all blame. In contrary, if the first or third factor is responsible for the echo chamber, then we have created our own echo chambers.
  5. Facebook Echo-Chamber - Correct Answer-1. Who our friends are and what stories they share As a result, the researchers found that only 24 percent of news stories shared by liberals' friends were cross-cutting and

about 35 percent of stories shared by conservatives' friends were cross-cutting. Clearly, the like-mindedness of our Facebook friends traps us in an echo chamber.

  1. Among all the news stories shared by friends, which ones are displayed by the newsfeed algorithm The newsfeed algorithm further selects which of the friends' news stories to show you. This is based on your prior interaction with friends. Because we tend to engage more with like-minded friends and ideologically similar websites, the newsfeed algorithm further reduces the proportion of cross-cutting news stories to 22 percent for liberals and 34 percent for conservatives. Facebook's algorithm worsens the echo chamber, but not by much.
  2. Which of the displayed news stories we actually click on The researchers find that the final proportion of cross-cutting news stories we click on is 21 percent for liberals and 30 percent for conservatives. We clearly prefer news stories that are likely to reinforce our existing views rather than challenge them. The authors conclude that the primary driver of the digital echo chamber is the actions of users---who we connect with