Media Terrorism Feeding the Fear

MEDIA TERRORISM is using the power of the media to create fear or take away people's ability to think for themselves.

MEDIATERRORISM.NET asks people to be aware of these precepts and thus, become better consumers of media.



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Big events were the precursor to any kind of mass media. Large groups assembled to experience the same thing at once. If it was the recreation of a naval battle, or humans fighting animals, the group got to see all, and talk about it afterwards. As the centuries progressed, ways of reaching more people at once were developed and used to deliver various messages to large audiences. The printing press, a landmark invention in the advent of the mass media, provided an invaluable tool for replicating the exact words of another and conveying them to groups of readers (providing that there was a reader among the group). Prior to this, hand written text was the only way written information could be captured and disseminated.

From that time onward, books and newspapers entered the domain of the common person. The popularity of these media increased exponentially from the time the printing press was invented by Gutenberg in the 1430s. Subsequently, makers of products and services realized the power they had (in print) to reach the audience and sell more. Profit-driven desires fueled the advent of the advertising industry.

People needed to be swayed to purchase product A over product B. Using logic, the sense of belonging, or even emotion, advertisers developed ways to get the masses to notice the products and recognize a need for them.

Then, among inventors such as Marconi and Tesla, the twentieth century ushered in the invention of radio. Its purpose was to bring delightful and informative programming to the masses. At the same time, the use of fear was apparent as advertisers competed for the audience's attention and product choice. A few years later, when Farnsworth (or was it RCA?) introduced television, it made the spread of information-and fear-easier for those in the "control room." Thanks to Al Gore, modern society now has the Internet. That just about brings us up to today.


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