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                    210  COMMUNICA TION THEORY
                    convulsions in their life, are always with you Monday to Friday. Thus
                    the ritual involves a constancy of participation, not just the consumption
                    of texts.
                        As Baym (2000) suggests, ‘Being a member of an audience commu-
                    nity is not just about reading a text in a particular way; rather, it is about
                    having a group of friends, a set of activities one does with those friends,
                    and a world of relationships and feelings that grow from those friend-
                    ships’ (207). Such friendship may be with the characters as much as with
                    other ‘audience friends’ who are enveloped by the same form of virtual
                    participation.
                        This densely textured world of participation provides a standing
                    reserve of sign-values, a reserve which is at its richest in the wider band-
                    width of broadcast, which is, ultimately, television. Television is able to
                    convey complexity but with a remarkable uniformity across a popula-
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                    tion. Never have so may complex meanings – whether these be readerly
                    or writerly in the Barthesian sense, hot or cool in the McLuhanist sense –
                    been available to such large audiences.
                        Following our earlier discussion, the definition of the  flâneur,
                    whether embodied or electronic, as one who bathes in the crowd can be
                    satisfied within both audience and network environments. However, it
                    can be observed that audience–medium interactions offer much more to
                    virtual flâneurs than do network–medium interactions.
                        As we saw with the rise of the flâneur, the excitement of flânerie was
                    not a return to Gemeinschaft and community organized around interaction
                    between members of a speech community. Rather, it was about interaction
                    with a crowd of some form. Few physical forms of mutual association
                    outside of broadcast assemblies offer this effect today save for the specta-
                    cle of the large sporting event.
                        The media offer the opportunity for people to come together to
                    understand the central questions of life, from the meaning of art to the
                    meaning of death, of sickness, of youth, of beauty, of happiness and of
                    pain (see Martin-Barbero, 1997).
                        But audience communities which are organized around texts do not
                    fully account for the kinds of social integration that are possible within
                    broadcast. We have seen already how practices of media usage are com-
                    mon to network and broadcast dynamics alike. Broadcast, which may be
                    said to ‘influence consciousness’, is also an environment for practices and
                    rituals which are not simply semiotic.


                    Symbolic inequality in broadcast communities

                    The constancy that is provided by media genres to provide a common cul-
                    ture over time points to media as a mythological ‘centre’ of social life in
                    modern societies, to use Couldry’s (2003) phrase, but it is a constancy
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