Mobilising the AudienceTom O'Regan, Mark Balnaves, Jason Sternberg Mobilising the Audience is the first comprehensive integration of industry and academic audience research in Australia. Introducing new directions in method and analysis, this contemporary probe into 'audience-making' illustrates the ways marketers, producers and governments mobilise an audience. Included are case studies of Generation X, computer gaming, the child audience, TV ratings, Aboriginal media, and Asian community television. Such a diverse range provides real life contexts for students, professionals and industry workers, introducing them to the critical links between research about media audiences and use of that research in making decisions about policy and content. Readers will be interested, too, in the significance of geo-demographics in public opinion polls, and the influence of audience in the shaping of our cultural institutions. |
Contents
Governing Audiences | 10 |
The Politics and Technologies | 29 |
Research on Children and the Media | 65 |
through Generation X | 81 |
Becoming AudienceMinded | 104 |
Towards an Ecology of Cultural Attendance | 131 |
Innovative Research for Online | 168 |
Enlisting the Virtual Audience | 188 |
Finding an Audience for a New Service | 235 |
Theorising the Diasporic Audience | 266 |
The SBS Audience | 283 |
Voter Communication | 308 |
| 331 | |
| 355 | |
Common terms and phrases
ACNielsen activities advertising agencies AECP analysis arts audiences attitudes audience research Auran Australia Council Australian Australian Broadcasting Authority behaviour broadcasting campaign cent Cluster commercial concepts consumer copy-tasters cultural attendance cultural events database demographic diasporic diverse editor editorial independence example fans focus gamers gender geodemographics groups Gungahlin identified important Indigenous media industry interest interpretive communities interviews journalists Labor Liberal Party market research media audiences methodologies Microsoft Train Simulator museums newspapers newsrooms OzTAM participants Party HR patterns pay TV performing arts political population profiles public sphere radio ratings research readership research relation relationship responses SBS-TV sector significant social South Park sphericules strategy subsidised survey technologies television Tom O'Regan Trainz understanding users venues viewers viewing visitor research voting دو



