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Transformation of Media Systems
By Austen Uche Uwosomah
Introduction
All over the world, transformation has occurred on media systems within the past decades particularly in
aspects of structural organization in “media firms and policy makers” (Hardy, 2008:78). The transformation
is noticeable in both the print and electronic media. These two spheres of media systems have been
structurally and politically transformed due to the cumulation of factors such as technology, liberalization
and commercialization. Of the trio, “technological development played an important enabling role …”
(Dyson et al, 1988, see Hardy page 59). The availability of new delivery technologies in the electronic
media of cable and satellite offered variety of channels that catapulted transmission of programs and
advertisements over nationally regulated broadcasting monopolies thereby putting increased strain on policy
makers to deregulate media policy permitting expansion of national and private commercial channels
(Humphreys 1996; Brants and Siune 1992, see Hardy, ibid page 65). Deregulation policy marked the dawn
of liberal media systems in the West and with liberalization more media outlets were allowed to operate
bringing about competition for audience patronage further leading to increased commercialization in media
activities. In this brief paper, I shall give inventory on how commercialization has caused transformation on
the Western media systems and in particular, the western broadcasting media.
Western Media Systems and Commercialization
Political and economic factors are two underlying stats that have consistently effected changes in media
systems across the world. This is evident in the way structural changes in Western media outlets have
occurred over the years due to deregulation and profit maximization incentive. Historical antecedence from
recounts that, mass media services all over the world were first started by the state from the time different
states nationally regulated or organized press activities after World War II. “During the cold war, radio and
television signals were broadcast and jammed between East and West as both sides financed propagandists
radio directed at each other’s population.” All radio and TV were developed largely in a national mould
(Hardy, Ibid: 65). By then media outlets were under sole funding of the state. First it was the newspaper
medium and later public broadcasting corporations. This was before privatization of media saw the light of
day.
Around the 1980s the monopolistic grip of government on public broadcasting was reduced. Hardy
(Ibid:57) remarks that the most significant harbinger of commercialization in media systems, not
undermining technology, economies and politics, “was the abolition of the public service broadcasting
monopolies and the expansion of commercial television to become an integral and dominant part of national
media systems”. The surge of commercial television was empowered by the enabling environment created
by deregulation, a consequence of liberalization, and which led to privatization. This opened vistas for
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“transnationalization and marketization across western media systems”. This was the era when several
national governments in the West re-regulated media ownership from statutory to public corporation. The
benefit of this was that the media corporations were able to act more liberally with regards to content
formation and dissemination. This is even so as they were mandated to make certain percentage of revenue
required for their funding.
Commercialization in national broadcasting or public service broadcasting media came with the influx of
commercial programs in the content of radio and TV daily programs. Before the advent of radio and later
TV all commercials used to find their way on pages of newspapers as advertisements. But the technologies
of radio and TV revolutionalized and brought a rapid diversification of business activities into the
broadcasting industry. And then there was the softening of media policy to allow private ownership in
broadcasting media and “the sale of public communication asset to private investors” in most western
countries. This paved way for the intervention of market forces and competition among media operatives.
The outcome of this as Hardy (Ibid: 71) notes according to Tunstall and Palmer (1991: 43) were
“competition for audience between a substantial number of channels; direct inter-channel competition for
advertising; aggressively competitive programming; a sharp decline in serious programming in peak hours;
progressive competition for popular talent…”.
Further, Hardy affirms that “the expansion of commercial television, and increasing competition among all
broadcasting firms led to growing number of commercialism” in the media sector. In Western Europe for
instance, by the 1990s, there were about 36 commercial terrestrial channels including new satellite and cable
television (Brants & Siune1992: 104. see Hardy page 58). Many changes occurred during this time in the
western European media environment. The changes that were noticeable, inter alia include: “(1) emergence
of the communication/media sector as a dynamic industry in its own right (2) trend towards concentration of
media groups and establishing multimedia conglomerates (3) increasing availability of new services through
cable and satellite (4) reorganisation of broadcasting/communication sectors through deregulation and
privatisation…” (Weymouth and Lamizet 1996: 211, see Hardy page 58).
According to China TV Report (2003-2004) in a review on European Communication Committee: Economy
—Strategy of Digital Market, it was revealed that commercialization in media systems is a constant and
dynamic process encompassing all the areas of media operations to meet market requirements vis-à-vis
advertisers and consumers. The media acts as link between consumers looking for interesting contents and
advertisers looking for media attract consumers. “Accordingly, media organizations can be grouped into
investor, content producer, program distributor, transmission and reception network operator, technology
and equipment supplier, advertising operator, and media research organization. Together they form the
content market, consumer market and advertising market” (see China TV Report 2003-2004).