The Media and Moral Panics


The media prides itself on objective reporting and journalistic integrity (Schissel, 1997), albeit, the media - the news - is governed by the community on a supply-and-demand basis (Ibid.); what happens on a ‘slow news day’? The media often finds itself sensationalising events, or embellishing previously reported occurrences so as to appease the audiences; more often than not, the disaffiliated, or marginalised, segments of the community, particularly the youth, find itself at the end of this opportunistic reporting. Schissel (1997) suggests, “television news teeters on the edge between fact and fiction” and “though they [forms of news accounts] are mandated to be based on an objective reality, are largely based on consumer demand,” thus it is quite easy to espy how concerns within society, especially over youth crime, are formulated and fuelled by the media. Such moral concerns are referred to as moral panics.

Moral panics erstwhile resurface when a new, but similar, topic of concern arises in the public domain. These panics, when specifically generated by the mass media (radio, television, cinema, and print)(Springhall, 1998, p.160), are called media panics. Socially, these are used to attempt to re-establish the status-quo, and culturally, to act to prevent the undermining of the cultural elite as a critical force (Ibid.)
 

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