British Mass Media

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British Mass Media

British Press
• There is no subscription
• Broadsheets (popular) papers – “Quality
papers”
• 1350 regional and local newspapers
• 8000 periodical publications
(“general”, “specialized”, “trade”,
“technical”, “professional”)
The newspapers in Britain are
proud of the fact that they are
different from each other.
PAPERS
Quality papers report national
and international news very
Popular papers thoroughly
• Less in size • Bigger in size
• With many pictures • With larger articles
• Big headlines • More detailed information
• Short articles • For more serious readers
• Easy to read • “The Times”, “Daily
• “Daily Express”, “Daily Telegraph”, “The
Mail”, “Daily Mirror”, “The Guardian”, “Financial
Sun”, etc. Times”, “The
Independent”, etc.
Sunday Papers
• Have a higher circulation than the dailies
• “Quality” papers: “Observer”, “Sunday
Times”, “Sunday Telegraph”, etc.
• “Popular” papers: “News of the World”,
“Sunday Express”, “Sunday Mirror”, “Mail
on Sunday”
The Daily Telegraph
The Daily Telegraph
• A British broadsheet newspaper, founded
in 1855
• Has been politically conservative
• The only remaining daily newspaper
printed on traditional newsprint in the
Broadsheet format
• Its sister paper, The Daily Telegraph, was
founded in 1961
The Guardian
The Guardian
• Until 1959 The Manchester Guardian
• The Guardian is considered British centre-
left
• Founded by textile traders and merchants
The Guardian had a reputation as “an
organ of the middle class”
• Printed in full colour
The Independent
The Press

•The Times is a British daily national •The Daily Mail is a British daily middle-
newspaper based in London.It began market tabloid newspaper owned by the
in 1785 under the title The Daily Daily Mailand General Trust and
Universal Register, adopting its published in London. It is the United
current name on 1 January 1788. The Kingdom's second-biggest-selling daily
Times is the first newspaper to have newspaper after The Sun. Uniquely for a
born that name, lending it to British daily newspaper, it has a
numerous other papers around the majority female readership with women
world, such as The Times of India making up 52-55% of its readers.
and The New York Times.
• Tabloids – “”Gutter press”
make news sensational, publish “personal articles”
with shock and excite
Sunday Mirror
The Times is read by the people who run the country.
The Daily Mail is read by the wives of the men who run the
country.
The Guardian is read by the people who would like to run the
country.
The Daily Mirror is read by the people who think they run the
country.
The Financial Times is read by the people who own the country.
The Daily Telegraph is read by the people who remember the
country as it used to be.
The Daily Express is read by the people who think the country is
still like that.
Television
• mostly entertainment;
• all programs are suitable for children till 9
p. m.;
• maintains a strict balance between the
political parties;
• people tend to get more information from
television;
• There are 5 TV channels in Britain: BBC
One, BBC Two, ITV1, Channel 4, Channel
5.
• BBC – British Broadcasting Corporation
• ITV – Independent Television
• IBA – Independent Broadcasting
Authorities
• The UK now also has a large number of
digital terrestrial channels including a
further six from the BBC, five from ITV and
three from Channel 4 among the variety of
others.
TV in Great Britain
•Television is the most popular entertainment in British home life today. In
London people have four TV channels: BBC I, BBC II, ITV=Independent
Television (Channel III) and Channel IV. BBC and ITV start early in the morning.
One can watch news programmes, all kinds of chat shows, quiz shows, soap
operas, different children’s programmes, dramas, comedies and different
programmes of entertainment on these channels. Britain has two channels (BBC
II and Channel IV) for presenting programmes on serious topics, which are
watched with great interest by a lot of people. These channels start working on
early weekday mornings.
BBC-1
• BBC-1 and ITV show popular programs.
BBC-2
ITV
Channel 4
Satellite TV

• Sky Movies

• Sky Sports

• Discovery
British Film Studios
•Ealing Studios is a television and film
production company and facilities provider
at Ealing Green in west London. It is the
oldest continuously working studio facility
for film production in the world. It is best
known for a series of classic films
produced in the post-WWII years, including
Kind Hearts and Coronets (1949), Passport
to Pimlico (1949), The Lavender Hill Mob
(1951), and The Ladykillers (1955).
•Amicus Productions was a British
film production company, based at
Shepperton Studios, England,
active between 1962 and 1977. It
was founded by American
producers and screenwriters
Milton Subotsky and Max
Rosenberg. In the mid-1960s
Amicus also produced two films
based on the television series
Doctor Who which had debuted on
television in 1963.
Cartoons

•Chicken Run is a 2000 stop-motion animated comedy film produced by the


British studio Aardman Animations. As the studio's first feature-length film, it
was directed by Peter Lord and Nick Park.

•Shaun the Sheep is a British stop-motion animated television series and


spin-off of the Wallace and Gromit franchise. Having first aired in the UK on
CBBC in March 2007 and broadcast in 180 countries globally, the series
consists of 150 seven-minute episodes.
Radio
BBC corporation includes:
• non-stop pop music
• light entertainment
• minority interests
• news
• sport and education
Radio
• Radio in the UK is dominated by the BBC
Radio;
• BBC Radio 1 – modern music
• BBC Radio 2 – music for adults
• Radio 3 – programs about culture and art
• Radio 4 – colloquial genre
• Five Life – news and sports programs
BBC Radio
•BBC Radio 1 broadcasts
•BBC Radio 1Xtra mostly current pop music
broadcasts rap, output on FM and digital radio,
RnB and with live music throughout the
drum'n'bass year
•BBC Radio 6 Music •BBC Radio 3 is a classical
music station, broadcasting
transmits
high-quality concerts and
predominantly performances. At night, it
alternative music, transmits a wide range of jazz
with many live and world music
sessions •BBC Radio 4 is a current
•BBC Radio 5 Live affairs and speech station,
Sports Extra is a with news, debate and radio
companion to Five drama. It broadcasts the daily
Live for additional radio soap
•BBC Radio 5 Live broadcasts
events coverage.
live news and sports
commentary with phone-in
debates and studio guests.
Internet
Dial-up

Cable

Broadband

Digital Subscriber Line


(DSL)
Wireless Broadband
Internet
• The share of households with internet
access in the United Kingdom grew from 9
percent in 1998 to 90 percent in 2018.
• Online shoppers in the UK spend more
per household than consumers in any
other country.
• Dial-up Internet access was first
introduced in the UK by Pipex in March
1992, having been established during
1991 as the UK's first commercial Internet
provider. By November 1993 Pipex
provided Internet service to 150 customer
sites.
Broadband Internet
• Broadband Internet access in the UK was, initially,
provided by a large number of regional cable
television and telephone companies which gradually
merged into larger groups. The development of digital
subscriber line (DSL) technology has allowed broadband
to be delivered via traditional copper telephone cables.
Also, Wireless Broadband is now available in some
areas. These three technologies (cable, DSL and
wireless) now compete with each other.
• Cable broadband uses coaxial cables or optical
fibre cables. The main cable service provider in the UK
is Virgin Media and the current maximum speed
available to their customers is 350Mbit/s (subject to
change).
• Asymmetric digital subscriber line (ADSL) was
introduced to the UK in trial stages in 1998 and a
commercial product was launched in 2000. In
the United Kingdom, most exchanges, local
loops and backhauls are owned and managed
by BT Wholesale, who
then wholesale connectivity via Internet service
providers, who generally provide the connectivity
to the Internet, support, billing and value added
services (such as web hosting and email).
• Children's Internet Access

Ages of 3-4:
1% own a smartphone
21% own a tablet
96% watch TV on a TV set for around 15hr a week
41% watch TV on other devices but primarily on a
tablet
40% play games for around 6hr a week
53% go online for around 8hr a week
71% mostly use tablets to go online
48% use YouTube
0% have a social media profile
Children's Internet Access
• Ages of 5-7:
• 5% own a smartphone
• 35% own a tablet
• 95% watch TV on a TV set for around 13.5hr a week
• 49% watch TV on other devices but primarily on a tablet
• 66% play games for around 7.5hr a week
• 79% go online for around 9hr a week
• 63% mostly use a tablet to go online
• 71% use YouTube
• 3% have a social media profile
Children's Internet Access
• Ages of 8-11:
• 39% own a smartphone
• 52% own a tablet
• 95% watch TV on a TV set for around 14hr a week
• 55% watch TV on other devices but primarily on a tablet
• 81% play games for around 10hr a week
• 94% go online for around 13.5hr a week
• 46% mostly use a tablet to go online, 22% use a mobile
• 81% use YouTube
• 23% have a social media profile
Children's Internet Access
• Ages of 12-15:
• 83% own a smartphone
• 55% own a tablet
• 91% watch TV on a TV set for around 14.5hr a week
• 68% watch TV on other devices but primarily on a tablet
• 77% play games for around 12hr a week
• 99% go online for around 21hr a week
• 49% mostly use a tablet to go online, 26% use a mobile
• 90% use YouTube
• 74% have a social media profile
References

• 1. Беглов С.Н. Четвертая власть: британская модель. – М., 2002. С. 182.


• 2. Беглов С.И. Империя меняет адрес. – М., 1997. С. 10-24.
• 3. Беглов С.И. Печать Великобритании // Вестник МГУ. Серия 10. Журналистика. 2000. № 3. С. 44-56.
• 4. Власов Ю.М. Средства массовой информации и современное буржуазное государство. – М., 1985.
• 5. Любимов Б.И. Семьдесят лет британского вещания. Краткая история радиовещания и телевидения
Великобритании. – М., 199S.
• 6. Любимов Б.И. Великобритания и глобализация мирового теле- и радиовещания (коммерциализация
телевидения – дорога к глобализации) // Вестник МГУ. Серия 10. Журналистика. 1999. № 6. С. 62. (European
Campaign Planner. Spring. P. 107; Guardian. 1994. 20 Dec. P. 9)
• 7. Любимов Б.И. Великобритания и глобализация мирового теле- и радиовещания (коммерциализация
телевидения – дорога к глобализации) // Вестник МГУ. Серия 10. Журналистика. 1999. № 5. С. 74.
• 8. Материалы о зарубежных средствах массовой информации в 1990-2002 гг. // Вестник МГУ. Серия 10.
Журналистика. 1990-2002. № 4-6.
• 9. Observer. – 1999. 3 Oct. Sec. B. P. 8.
• 10. Интернет ресурсы:

• 1) British Media. Режим доступа: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FaHA3_L4SyQ


• 2) Internet in the United Kingdom. Режим доступа:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internet_in_the_United_Kingdom
• 3) What is Media for British people? Режим доступа:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=33&v=QjAaj0Baxmw
• 4) Интернет в Англии. Режим доступа: https://nag.ru/articles/article/100582/internet-v-
anglii-zametki-polzovatelya.html

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