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Press advertising and the ascent of the `Pensée Unique' |
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Notes for this articleBasic message: Editors want to make lots of money which means they need lots of readers in order to appeal to advertisers. In order to attract those readers, the political message of the newspaper must be moderated.
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AbstractThe press industry depends in a crucial way on the possibility of financing an important fraction of its activities by advertising receipts. We show that this induces the editors of newspapers to moderate, in several cases, the political message they display to their readers, compared with the political opinions they would have expressed otherwise. To this end, we consider a three-stage game in which editors select sequentially their political image, the price of their newspaper and the advertising tariff they oppose to the advertisers. The intuition of the result lies in the fact that editors have to sell tasteless political messages to their readers in order to sell a larger audience to the advertisers.
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