Abstract
Active youth involvement in a community's daily life is the precondition for its development. The media are an important tool in securing that active involvement. An analysis of the younger generation’s presence across platforms further serves to gain a deeper understanding of the societal capacity for critical thinking and the level of general affinity to change.
By conducting a one month long study of five informative TV programs, six daily newspapers (in printed form), two youth portals and the RTS (national public broadcaster) program listings, this paper aims to gain insight into the overall presence of young people in those media, and the topics which occupy them. Furthermore, the study aims to gain an understanding about the impact of a split representation of reality imposed by the selected media to the youth.
Noticing the information overflowing from one media platform to another is of great importance, as it has an impact on the youth and their activism efforts, thus bearing a significant role in the studies conducted by the media and communication theory experts.
Young people are making appearances in television broadcasting programs, having shows dedicated to them by the National public broadcaster (RTS) and are also publishing news on their active platform portals. Messages are being circulated, but there haven’t been any detailed, large-scale studies which can offer an answer to the question: what is the content of these messages, and if they circulate across the communicational space?
The key contribution that this study aims to achieve is an attempt to answer these questions.
The findings of this paper suggest that the communicational space of the youth towards the public is narrow, without any active communication channels, nor is there any information overflowing cross means of communication. The findings further indicate that the complexity and the solemnity of the content has shown to depend on the media which have created the content.
Knowledge gained in this paper will serve as a starting point for further theoretical discussions, and a greater scope of media platforms selected to be included in future studies could lay the foundation for a work style reform of said media platforms.
Keywords
References
Copyright
Authors retain copyright of the published papers and grant to the publisher the non-exclusive right to publish the article, to be cited as its original publisher in case of reuse, and to distribute it in all forms and media.
Licensing
The published articles will be distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution ShareAlike 4.0 International license (CC BY-SA). It is allowed to copy and redistribute the material in any medium or format, and remix, transform, and build upon it for any purpose, even commercially, as long as appropriate credit is given to the original author(s), a link to the license is provided, it is indicated if changes were made and the new work is distributed under the same license as the original.
Users are required to provide full bibliographic description of the original publication (authors, article title, journal title, volume, issue, pages), as well as its DOI code. In electronic publishing, users are also required to link the content with both the original article published in CM: Communication and Media and the licence used.
Authors are able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the non-exclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), with an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.
Self-archiving policy
Authors are permitted to deposit author’s publisher's version (PDF) of their work in an institutional repository, subject-based repository, author's personal website (including social networking sites, such as ResearchGate, Academia.edu, etc.), at any time after publication.
Full bibliographic information (authors, article title, journal title, volume, issue, pages) about the original publication must be provided and links must be made to the article's DOI and the license.
Disclaimer
The views expressed in the published works do not express the views of the Editors and the Editorial Staff. The authors take legal and moral responsibility for the ideas expressed in the articles. Publisher shall have no liability in the event of issuance of any claims for damages. The Publisher will not be held legally responsible should there be any claims for compensation.