by Olivia Watkins
Recently with the election of a US president, who has more
experience being a television celebrity than in politics, it would be fair to
say politics has become a media game more than relative political experience.
Donald Trump was claimed by many to be an unexpected victor of the
presidential election and indeed the Republican nomination but is it really
such a surprise?
Everyone knows who Donald Trump was, everyone knows his message,
whether you were watching a pro or anti-trump media you would be exposed to his
message. Ironically, by criticising him so heavily in the media Trump rather
gained more attention, and therefore more support.
With programmes such as Saturday Night Live and media broadcasts
such as Buzzfeed negatively portraying Trump to the extreme, it creates a
backlash from his supporters of positive propaganda while also alienating some
moderate people who then see him as the victim of the media, and if so how much
of the bad things he did are solely negative propaganda. In addition, by some
more liberal media not attacking Hillary Clinton in the same way some people
believe that the media is covering for her and therefore will more readily
believe any accusations Donald Trump throws at Hillary Clinton.
In this way the use of satirical comedy about politics painting
either Trump, Hillary or both to the extreme ironically aided him. He got more,
effectively, free television time portraying his message than anyone else, and
while it shocked many, evidently it also gained him support - arguably in part
due to people perceiving him as the victim of a bullying media who are
portraying him worse than he actually is. Trump spent only $10 million on
television advertisements but has benefitted from an estimated $1.9 billion in
free media coverage. In comparison, Hillary Clinton spent $27.9 million in paid
advertisements and benefitted from an estimated $764 million in free media
attention. This displays how important media coverage is in modern politics. By
all this television time, positive just aid his cause and some of the more
outrageous things he's done are dismissed or at the very least overlooked as
simply being untruthful propaganda aimed at him from an accusatory media.
It is also significant that it was the media star not the former
first lady who won the presidency. It shows what type of place the digital
world is developing into, one where political correctness is being shunned,
where television becomes reality and the game played online and virtually is
the game played on the real world stage. It is now more a game of who can
accuse the other the loudest, who can get their message delivered on the most
screens - be it displayed in a positive or negative light.
In addition, news, sometimes false, in the media shows up on bias
feeds on Facebook. Facebook and internet cookies record sites you visit and
things you and your friends like so your feed or pop-up ads are personalised,
while predominately useful in minor things it can become dangerous in politics.
Many people in certain areas, with friends who have certain political
viewpoints and therefore like liberal or conservative posts and news articles,
will only see one side of the argument and this inhibits them from making an
informed decision. They will only hear the negatives of one candidate and the
positives of another. This can lead to extremism on both sides and could partly
explain the deep, political divide that emerged in the US throughout the
elections and remains right now with protests during Trumps inauguration.
So, is politics becoming a television game? I believe certainly it
has become a media one, with personalised news feeds only showing one angle and
the victor having received significantly more television time - positive or
negative. American politics, during the 2016 election, seemed more like a
television show that someone could easily forget was not virtual and something,
that would indeed, have significant consequences in the real world.
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