Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 160
Trim: 6¾ x 9¼
978-0-7425-2485-9 • Hardback • November 2005 • $111.00 • (£85.00)
978-0-7425-2486-6 • Paperback • November 2005 • $36.00 • (£30.00)
978-1-4616-4714-0 • eBook • November 2005 • $34.00 • (£25.00)
Eileen R. Meehan is the Lemuel Heidel Brown Chair in Media and Political Economy at the Manship School of Mass Communication at Louisiana State University.
Chapter 1 1 The Blame Game
Chapter 2 2 Don't Blame the Viewers
Chapter 3 3 Competitors? Rivals? Collaborators?
Chapter 4 4 Star Trek, Synergy, and the Transindustrialization of Tribbles
Chapter 5 5 If Not the People... Who?
Chapter 6 References
Meehan tells it like it is! Television is unmasked in this lively, well-documented, and sharply argued text that will be savored by media students and scholars. Meehan presents a thorough analysis of U.S. television's markets for consumers, ratings, and programs within the context of a transindustrial structure and corporate synergy. Thanks to this critical study, television viewers will be relieved to know that they aren't to blame for what has been called 'a vast wasteland.'
— Janet Wasko, University of Oregon
In Why TV Is Not Our Fault, Eileen Meehan effectively explodes the notion that television ratings represent accurate measures of the number of audience members who exercise their demands for specific programming in a free, competitive market. This cogent and incisive book offers a historically contextualized, unassailable argument that corporate—and not audience—interest is what counts in television programming. It is distinctive in exposing that 'audience measurements' are shaped by advertisers' and network and cable owners' shared demand for consumers that meet the appropriate upscale demographics. The book is a myth-busting, political-economic analysis of the confluence of television programming and the selling of consumers to advertisers through ratings. It is long overdue and essential reading for students and scholars interested in television studies, and—more broadly—the political economy of communication. I only regret that Why TV Is Not Our Fault cannot be made required reading for all television viewers.
— Lisa M. McLaughlin, Miami University; editor, Feminist Media Studies
In this carefully crafted book, Meehan contends that the audience cannot be blamed for the poor, and declining, level of television programming. Instead, as she posits in five closely argued chapters, one should blame the interconnected elements of highly successful commercial business. . . . Recommended.
— Choice Reviews
A carefully crafted argument that we as the audience are not to be blamed for the poor and declining level of programming. Instead, as Meehan posits in five closely argued chapters, we should blame the interconnected elements of a highly successful commercial business. . . . This surely does suggest some different ways of looking at 'accepted' facts.
— Communication Booknotes Quarterly
This is a really great, concise, and clearly written book. Meehan's insights are highly accessible—wish I'd had time to read this with an eye toward adopting in fall 2006!
— Douglas L. Battema, Western New England College
Meehan's timely book finally lays bare the facts about who controls television programming and how and why they do what they do. It once and for all puts to rest the claim that television executives simply 'give people what they want.' This is a serious and sophisticated scholarly book; Meehan carefully analyzes the economics and sociology of the industry to reach her conclusions. But she does so in an accessible way, without hiding behind jargon or intellectual obfuscation. Policymakers, industry professionals, and concerned citizens should all read this book—and will be glad they did.
— Thomas Streeter, University of Vermont
Brilliant, readable, and highly teachable.
— Kate Kane, Northeastern Illinois University
—An ideal supplement for courses in Media and Society, Media Literacy, Media Criticism, Media Economics, and Introduction to Mass Communication.
—A fun, short, accessible guide to the political economy of television and, specifically, who controls TV content.
—Explains the Nielsen ratings and how much (or little) they affect and reflect viewing preferences.
—Uses political economy to show how corporate structure, market structure, and deregulation combine to integrate the industries of network television, cable television, and film and to create television's Big Five and their media empires—Disney, General Electric, News Corporation, Time Warner, and Viacom.
—Emphasizes the Big Five's operations in television (production, distribution, and access) without overlooking their operations in film (production, distribution, and sometimes exhibition).
—Uses Star Trek as an extended example of programming and franchising.
—Treats television ratings as a product constrained by demand, cost efficiency,and other market forces.
—Includes a creative approach to media literacy—how we can still enjoy television while knowing how its political economy works.