Media may refer to:
Read more about Media: Communications, Computing, Fine Art, Life Sciences, Locations, Music, Mythology, Phonology, Ships
Other articles related to "media":
... a national organization dedicated to media reform and democratization ... the amount of informed popular participation in crucial media and communication policy debates, which have generally been conducted behind closed doors by powerful corporate ... The issues Free Press has worked on include stopping media concentration supporting independent nonprofit and noncommercial media ending "fake news," where commercial interest plant ...
... Jonathan Bixby, costume designer ... John Martin Broomall, congressman ...
... See also Media culture Increased business competition, and the introduction of econometric methods have changed the business practices of the mass communications media ... The business monopoly practice of media consolidation has reduced the breadth and the depth of the journalism practiced and provided ...
... In subsequent Olympic Games, international media occasionally referred to Moussambani's potential successors — athletes who might record spectacularly poor times ... Prior to the 2008 Summer Olympics, media in several countries—including Australia, Denmark, Canada, New Zealand and the United Kingdom—suggested that Stany Kempompo Ngangola, a swimmer from the Democratic Republic ... The media also described ni-Vanuatu sprinter Elis Lapenmal and Palestinian swimmer Hamza Abdu as "potential successors to Moussambani" ...
... 2012 Save KLSD Media Consolidation and Local Radio, 2012 documentary film. 2011 Media critic and Free Press founder Robert W ... with Matt Tedrow, Austin Independent Media Center, 11 February ...
Famous quotes related to media:
“Few white citizens are acquainted with blacks other than those projected by the media and the socalled educational system, which is nothing more than a system of rewards and punishments based upon ones ability to pledge loyalty oaths to Anglo culture. The media and the educational system are the prime sources of racism in the United States.”
—Ishmael Reed (b. 1938)
“Today the discredit of words is very great. Most of the time the media transmit lies. In the face of an intolerable world, words appear to change very little. State power has become congenitally deaf, which is whybut the editorialists forget itterrorists are reduced to bombs and hijacking.”
—John Berger (b. 1926)