Corvinus
Corvinus

Where is the public value here?

Polyák, Gábor and Urbán, Ágnes (2024) Where is the public value here? Project Report. Österreichischer Rundfunk, Wien.

[img] PDF - Requires a PDF viewer such as GSview, Xpdf or Adobe Acrobat Reader
2MB

Official URL: https://zukunft.orf.at/show_content.php?sid=147&pvi_id=2415&pvi_medientyp=t&oti_tag=Texte

In Public Service Media in Europe : The Future of Public Service Media in the European Union (Texte 28). p. 76-80.

Abstract

The Hungarian public service media is internationally seen as a negative example, and this is completely understandable. The first step in media capture was the restructuring of the public service media and the creation of an editorial line loyal to the government. The aim was already obvious in 2010: the election winner Viktor Orbán wanted to build a media background that would keep public opinion under full control, and the public service media played a major role in this. Fourteen years have passed since then and we can say that the experiment has been successful from their point of view: they have succeeded in creating public control in a European Union member state and the public service media have played their part in this.

Item Type:Monograph (Project Report)
Series Name:Public value texte
Uncontrolled Keywords:Hungarian public service media;
Divisions:Institute of Data Analytics and Information Systems
Subjects:Media and communication
References:

Bódi, J., Polyák, G., & Urbán, Á. (2022). Az álhír fogalmának átalakulása a közszolgálati híradóban. A Hirado.hu álhírekkel kapcsolatos tartalmainak elemzése, 2010–2020 [The changing concept of fake news in public service news. An analysis of Hirado.hu’s content on fake news, 2010–2020] Médiakutató, 23(1), 7–26. https://www.mediakutato.hu/cikk/2022_01_tavasz/01_az_alhir_fogalmanak_atalakulasa.pdf

Mertek (2021). Four Shades of Censorship. Illusion of Public Service Media in the Czech Republic, Hungary, Romania and Slovakia. Mertek Media Monitor, Budapest. p.64. https://mertek.eu/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/Mertek-fuzetek_22.pdf

Mertek (2022). Election Campaign 2022. Analysis of the news shows of the three most-watched television channels. Mertek Media Monitor, Budapest. p.30. https://mertek.eu/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/Mertek_fuzetek_27.pdf

OSCE (Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights) (2018). Hungary: Parliamentary elections 8 April 2018. https://www.osce.org/files/f/documents/0/9/385959.pdf

OSCE (Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights) (2022). Hungary: Parliamentary elections and referendum 3 April 2022. https://www.osce.org/files/f/documents/2/6/523568.pdf

Rácz, A. (2016). Hungary: Where the government-controlled media was the main entry point for Russian metanarratives. In K. Pynnöniemi & A. Rácz (Eds.), Fog of falsehood: Russian strategy of deception and the conflict in Ukraine (pp. 211-243). Finnish Institute of International Affairs.

Urbán, Á. – Polyák, G. – Horváth, K. (2023). How Public Service Media Disinformation Shapes Hungarian Public Discourse. Media and Communication 11(4), 62-72. https://www.cogitatiopress.com/mediaandcommunication/article/view/7148

ID Code:11910
Deposited By: Erzsó Nyitrai
Deposited On:09 Oct 2025 14:06
Last Modified:09 Oct 2025 14:06

Repository Staff Only: item control page

Downloads

Downloads per month over past year

View more statistics