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Media Influence and Audience Agency

Media
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Media Influence and Audience Agency

Media
01 May 2026

Arguments, Evidence and Ideas to Explain Contemporary Media Influence and Audience Agency

Unit 4 Outcome 2 requires students to use arguments, evidence, and ideas to analyse and evaluate the contemporary media landscape. This means engaging with competing theoretical positions, drawing on current examples, and constructing evidence-based analytical responses.

Key Arguments About Media Influence

The Media Is Powerful (Strong Effects Position)

Arguments:
- Agenda-setting research (McCombs and Shaw, 1972) demonstrates that media coverage determines which issues the public considers important — media does not tell people what to think, but what to think about
- Cultivation theory (Gerbner) shows cumulative media exposure shapes perception of social reality
- Contemporary evidence: Cambridge Analytica’s use of Facebook data to target political advertising during the 2016 US election demonstrates that microtargeted media can influence political behaviour
- Algorithmic amplification of misinformation during the COVID-19 pandemic shaped public health attitudes and behaviour

Counter-arguments:
- Media effects are difficult to isolate from other social influences (family, education, peer groups)
- Audiences apply oppositional and negotiated readings that resist preferred messages
- Effects are variable across different audience groups and contexts

Audiences Have Significant Agency (Weak Effects / Active Audience Position)

Arguments:
- Uses and Gratifications research shows audiences actively select media to serve their needs — they are not passive recipients
- Social media enables audiences to contest, reframe, and counter mainstream media narratives
- Participatory culture (Jenkins) demonstrates audiences co-create meaning, remix content, and produce their own narratives
- Consumer power: audiences can and do force media institutions to change content, representations, and policies through organised pressure

Counter-arguments:
- Audience ‘choices’ are constrained by algorithmic curation — the appearance of choice masks structural limitation
- Media literacy is unequally distributed — audiences with lower media literacy may be more susceptible to influence
- Participatory culture primarily benefits those with digital access, skills, and cultural capital

Key Evidence for Examination Use

Example What It Demonstrates
Cambridge Analytica / Facebook (2016) Targeted media can influence political decision-making at scale
#MeToo movement Social media enables collective audience action to contest dominant narratives
Rupert Murdoch’s editorial influence Media ownership concentrates narrative power; editorial decisions reflect owner interests
COVID-19 infodemic (WHO term) Misinformation spread via social media had measurable public health consequences
Streaming algorithms (Netflix) Platform recommendation shapes viewing behaviour and normalises particular types of content
Indigenous media in Australia (NITV) Alternative media institutions can provide counter-narratives to mainstream representation

Constructing an Analytical Argument

Effective analytical arguments in VCE Media:
1. State a position clearly at the outset
2. Support with specific evidence — name the example, explain what it demonstrates
3. Apply a theoretical framework — name the theory and show how it explains the evidence
4. Acknowledge counter-evidence or competing perspectives
5. Conclude by reasserting the position in light of the evidence

EXAM TIP: VCAA examination questions on media influence and agency typically ask students to ‘discuss’, ‘evaluate’, or ‘analyse’ — these command words require more than description. They require you to weigh evidence, consider multiple perspectives, and reach a defensible conclusion.

APPLICATION: Build a personal evidence bank of 5–6 contemporary examples (from the past 5 years) that illustrate different aspects of media influence and audience agency. For each, note: what it demonstrates, which theoretical framework it supports or challenges, and how you would use it in an examination response.

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