This cutesy inforgraphic from Ad Age and MBA Online presents the reader with a breakdown of media use by type, time and generation. The initial study was performed by Magid Generational Strategies. At first blush this seems to present a thorough overview of how different populations consume media, but on closer examination there are some signifigant issues. These issues aside, and in some cases because of these issues, this long image (I've broken it into several pieces for readability's sake. See the full image here) raises a number of questions about not which types of media we consume but how our methods of media consumption are changing to the degree that this infographic doesn't quite make sense.
Given the increasing hullaballoo surrounding this week’s two sex-scandal stories (Strauss-Kahn and Schwarzenegger), this image of Schwarzenegger and soon-to-be ex-wife, Maria Shriver, strikes me as paradigmatic of how these scenarios seem to play out: focus in on brooding, somber (occasionally apologetic) male politician; blurry, out-of-focus female victim in the foreground. While the impetus behind these stories is supposedly exposing the men that “done them wrong,” it’s often the women who suffer most from the media backlash.
In January’s State of the Union, President Obama called this “our generation’s Sputnik moment.” Since then, I’ve been curious about how the administration would visualize the core message of that speech, which foregrounded science, education, and innovation. Exhibit A: the Beatles-esque tableaux above, from last week’s visit to an NYC science fair.
Image Credit: screenshot of Visual Budget, kickstarter.com
Visualizations are a necessary part of the way the media interprets government spending for the average viewer. Those of us who are not math whizzes, who may have trouble keeping our own accounts, find a simple graph or pie chart to be a useful aid. However, those representations often present an oversimplified view. Enter Visual Budget, a "cutting-edge data-visualization web site" that attempts to explain the nuances of government spending to the common citizen.
Click play, and you're smack in the middle of composing, as Jason Dockter, PhD student at Utah State University, creates a digital ethnography of skateboarding sub-culture. His website Going Multi-Modal documents, as Dockter writes, "the process that I went through creating multimodal composition similar to what I might ask students in my first-year composition course to create in a future semester." You can watch the digital iMovie take shape from the beginning, through several...different...stages of production, and through to the end. (The example piece is embedded after the break.)
Emily's post this past week
considers the ways in which many of the images of the shooting at Fort Hood
reflect a "conflicted understanding of this
event as both a military and a domestic tragedy." Her insightful
comments sent me searching through much of the photojournalism that
surrounds this recent tragedy and I found that many of the collections of slide
shows contain at least one, if not several, photographs of the media
documenting the aftermath of the event. Some of these photographs show the
media set against the setting sun while others focus on a key speaker
surrounded and almost swallowed by a sea of cameras and microphones.
While it is no surprise that, with the onslaught of the 24-hour news
cycle and the need for news, the media likes to focus on the impact of the media, I wonder whether we
might see these images of image-making as more than just meta?
As the memorial service for the victims of the Fort Hood shooting begins, I want to spend some time considering the visual representations of this event in the media. Photographs representing the shooting seem to mirror our conflicted understanding of this event as both a military and a domestic tragedy. In the absence of more information about the shooter and his motives, this ambiguity marks the photographs that appear online and in print. Some photographs evoke Columbine, Virginia Tech or 9/11 by focusing on groups of mourners and the buildings where the shooting took place. In so doing, these images emphasize the effects of violence on a place and a community. However, other photographs more closely resemble traditional war photography in which the soldier is represented through metonymic devices such as a uniform or a gun.
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