Miyerkules, Marso 9, 2016

Random Pictures, Random Thoughts

Hopia.
Pangalan(noun).
Minsan pagkain.
Minsan tayo.
At sa tayo,
ang masakit,
kasama ako.


                         
           Nabili ko ang hopiang ito sa isang branch ng Pectos sa Lucban, Quezon (isang maliit na bayan na hindi mabigyan ng prediksyon kung lalamig o iinit, parang ikaw). Sa halagang limang piso. Sulit dahil malasa at mataba. >>> pero bago ko ipagpatuloy ang kwento ko, matutulog na muna ako dahil may quiz pa ko bukaz. kaya bukas na lang ang susunod. >>> 

Media Conglomerate; Horizontal Integration and Vertical Integration in PH Media

Reflection paper requirement for COMM04
Media Conglomerate; Horizontal Integration and Vertical Integration in PH Media
Resa Salvador (March 2016)

Philippine media is influenced by many elements, but among these, the dominant wins.
 Media conglomerate is a company that owns huge numbers of companies in various mass media (publishing, television, radio, movies, and the Internet) that endeavor for policies and facilitate its control of the markets within its country and across the globe. On the other hand, horizontal integration consists of companies that acquire a similar company in the same industry while, companies that acquire a company that operates either before or after the acquiring company in the production process is vertical integration.
Viva Communications Inc. has become one of the most dynamic showbiz conglomerates this season. Among other major creative gambits, Viva has hit the headlines. (Philippine daily inquirer, March 2015)
Viva Communications Inc. (also known as Viva Entertainment Inc.) is a Filipino-owned entertainment company based in Quezon City and Pasig City, Philippines and was founded in 1981 by Vicente "Vic" del Rosario, Jr. Division includes: Viva Films, Viva Television, Viva International Pictures (VIP), Viva Artists Agency, Viva Live (formerly Viva Concerts & Events), Ultimate Entertainment (OOMPH! Radio), Viva Interactive, Viva Cable TV, Viva Sports, Viva Video, Inc. (Viva Communications' home video subsidiary), Viva Video City, Viva Music Group (VMG includes Viva Records, Vicor Music Philippines, Terno Recordings), Verje Music Publishing (VMP) ,Harmony Music Publishing, Amerasian Recording Studios, and Viva Publishing Group.
Viva Communications Inc. spring not from a technology driven age, particularly the digital mediums and the internet, such present era became a developmental challenge for the company to take risks. The company stretched its arms for developments through horizontal integration and vertical integration (which occur in most of their strategy) by partnering, buying, creating and making alliance companies helpful for its purpose - entertainment.
Since movies are not the only source of entertainment, which in the history of the company is its main amusement organ, according to a report of GMA News.TV, IPVG Corp. and Viva Communications Inc. formed a joint venture company last 2009 that will engage in interactive gaming and content distribution and other forms of entertainment.
IPVG, which is into information technology and telecommunications, online computer games and business process outsourcing, will provide Squirt Media $1 million worth of hosting and development of online game portal, billing integration and other services with the hardware that come with the services.
While Viva Communications will give $1 million worth of its video, audio and stock photos of current and future productions and with the talent services of artists and actors under its contract. This fact proves the Viva tactics.
VIVA has also formalized joint venture with Cignal TV last year (Manila Times, August 2015). The company diversified its publication (not just of music) but stories from mainstream E-Books flipping it to the screen (to edified Books) making a hit to the mainstream audience. An example is the Dairy ng Panget in 2014.
According to Anup Shah in his article in 2009, the idea of corporate media itself may not be a bad thing (considered bad because of the abusive monopolization, the domino effect with companies, and the limiting of choice for the audience) for it can foster healthy competition and provide a check against governments.
The Philippine media strive to compete with the world and time’s challenges that in return, leads to improvement and economic growth for the benefit of the majority (just like what the VIVA did). In terms of the use of media power in politics, politicians becomes publicized according to their will and the voters gain information and education.
However, the concern is when there is a concentration of ownership due to the risk of increased economic and political influence that can itself be unaccountable.
Although Entertainment is quite different with news (performing as a watchdog and mouthpiece, for it has greater concern on the state of the government, and other roles) it is still a part of the Philippine media and affects the country’s politics and economy and vice versa, positively and negatively; beneficiary or not.
In news, particularly the press, newspapers are merely mouthpieces of their owners. (The Lords of Press, 1999). This is justified by the individual cases of Publisher Emilio Yap, who’s described by the MB editors as authoritarian, and Razon of Manila Standard.
It is questionable that as a press, it is regulated mostly by business men and not those who are literate of the purpose; the right and good of journalism. Ideally, newspapers are not published even if they lose money because their aim is not profit but influence.
The ownership interests may affect what is and is not covered. Stories can end up being biased or omitted so as not to offend advertisers or owners. The ability for citizens to make informed decisions is crucial for a free and functioning democracy but now becomes threatened by such concentration in ownership.
 Media Conglomeration and Horizontal and Vertical Integration affects the three key elements in the Philippine Media: (1) The Company itself by either strengthening or deteriorating it. (2) The proprietors and their workers’ (in a publication, particularly the editors as the Lord of the Press presents) relationship and as an individual (conflict of interest between self and profession), and (3) The destination of the creation these companies produce (in line with the press, “those who do not realize what’s behind the screaming headlines and editorials”) that may enlightened or blinded.
The sad yet the truth and one thing in common in Philippine media, may it be entertainment, news or any genre in any purpose, is the proprietorship that tends to reduce the diversity of media voices and puts great power in the hands of a few companies.
We may believe that we are moving along the Libertarian theory because of the exercise of the press freedom, but digging deeply the kind media we have, the existence of authoritarian implementation is undermining the Philippine media
For now, I realized that this country even though exercises press freedom and always voices out the Art.4 Sec. 3 of PH Constitution, which I formerly believed as the most powerful element in the media; the fact is, power is not anchored to this, or in any credibility, but to the one who has power over it, the dominant proprietors.



Sources:
Cornel, S.S. (1999, April-June). The Lords of the Press. The Investigative Reporting
Magazine, Vol. V No.2.
Evan, T. (n.d).What is the difference between horizontal integration and vertical

Rubio, R.A. (2009, March 19).IPVG, Viva Communications form joint venture

company. GMANews.TV. Retrieved from http://www.gmanetwork.com/news/story/161854/money/companies/ipvg-viva-communications-form-joint-venture-company#sthash.Ni8NB4X8.dpuf.

Shah,A.Media Conglomerates, Mergers, Concentration of Ownership.(2009, January 2).
Retrived from http://www.globalissues.org/article/159/media-conglomerates-mergers-concentration-of-ownership.

Torre, N.U. (2015, March 14).Viva makes waves on multiple platforms. Philippine Daily 

Inquirer. Retrieved from http://entertainment.inquirer.net/165483/viva-makes-waves-on-multiple-platforms.

Cignal TV, Viva to launch new entertainment channel. (2015, August 8). Manila Times.

Retrieved from http://www.manilatimes.net/cignal-tv-viva-to-launch-new-entertainment-channel/207529/.

Viva Communications.(2016). In Wikipedia the Free Encyclopedia. Retrieved February


 2016, from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viva_Communications.