The geographical clustering of Chinese media production
Access Status
Authors
Date
2015Type
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Source Title
School
Collection
Abstract
Studies of China’s media have in the main privileged the nation-state. As the home of China Central Television (CCTV), the People’s Daily and a host of national regulatory bureaus, Beijing has long symbolised the hegemony of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP). At least this was the case until the late 1990s when provincial media began to exert their influence. Many media operations took their commercial opportunities when broadcasters were granted access to extend their signals nationally through designated satellite channels. By the end of the first decade of the 2000s some of these broadcasters achieved extensive geographical coverage by entering into mergers and alliances with internet businesses such as Sohu and Tudou.
Related items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
-
Archer, C.; Wolf, Katharina (2017)Digital and social media tools are no longer new and have become standard components of the public relations toolkit. However, they have undoubtedly changed and shaped the practice of public relations (PR) over the past ...
-
Nguyen, Thin K. (2012)Social media allows people to participate, express opinions, mediate their own content and interact with other users. As such, sentiment information has become an integral part of social media. This thesis presents a ...
-
Iskander, N.; Lugmayr, Artur (2011)New Media across the Internet is a growing phenomenon in this digital age. The explosive growth of online social networking firms creates business opportunities in the Internet media. These business opportunities require ...