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Article

The "Third Arm": New forms of paid-for content in the South African print media

Details

Citation

Cowling L, Hadland A & Tabe BFT (2008) The "Third Arm": New forms of paid-for content in the South African print media. Ecquid Novi: African Journalism Studies, 29 (1), pp. 100-119. http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/02560054.2008.9653377#preview

Abstract
In South Africa and globally, there is an ongoing critique of commercial media's relationship with advertising interests and a concern that commercial considerations are eroding the media's normative role in society. Critical political economists point to changes in newsroom organization and practice as evidence of a decline in standards of journalistic professionalism, and argue that commercial pressures on revenue and to increase profi ts have led to the conflation of advertising and editorial content. This study seeks to contribute to such political economy debates by investigating the role of commercial factors in media production, specifically in the area of media work and media content. Through an examination of the structures, routines, and practices employed by a South African media company to generate advertising revenue, the research explores the implications of such strategies for professional practice and, potentially, for the normative conceptions and operations of the media.

Keywords
Advertising revenue; advertorial; credibility; critical political economy; ethics; journalism practice; media content; media work; newsroom; organization

Journal
Ecquid Novi: African Journalism Studies: Volume 29, Issue 1

StatusPublished
Publication date31/12/2008
PublisherTaylor and Francis
Publisher URL
ISSN0256-0054
eISSN1942-0773

People (1)

Professor Adrian Hadland

Professor Adrian Hadland

Professor, Communications, Media and Culture