Was Mass Media a Temporary Era When Stories Forgot to Listen?
Was Mass Media a Temporary Era When Stories Forgot to Listen? Broadcast gave stories timely reach. It also made reply feel optional. Framing the Question Mass media matters because it changed not only how stories traveled, but what stories assumed about their audience. A story told through a newspaper chain, radio tower, or television network had to imagine most of its listeners from a distance. That distance created national moments, shared references, and cultural memory. It also trained storytellers to treat response as late, filtered, and secondary. The question is not whether mass media was bad. The sharper issue is whether one era of communication confused reaching people with understanding them. The Broadcast Deal: Reach Without Reply Mass media was partly a temporary era when stories forgot how to listen. But “forgot” needs precision. Mass media did not eliminate listening. Newspapers had letters to the editor. Radio stations had call-ins. Television had ratings. Brands ran sur...