Understanding Media

More than fifty years ago, Marshall McLuhan wrote the book, Understanding Media. He declared that the electronic media of last century (telephone, radio,

television) were changing the way we viewed the world. No longer were we tied to words and text.

McLuhan was famous for turning many phrases, but the best known was: “The medium is the message.” What he meant was that the medium was

essentially more important than the message itself. We are often more influenced by how the message is delivered than what the message is.

He also had a flair for the dramatic. He wrote that “electronic technology is within the gates, and we are numb, deaf, blind and mute about its encounter with

the Gutenberg technology, on and through which the American way of life was formed.”

McLuhan wrote all of this before the advent of the Internet. I am almost certain he would see the fulfillment of his predictions about technology in the way we

use the Internet. We go on the Internet to learn about the world, to post items and pictures on Facebook and blogs, and most importantly we go to the Internet

to entertain ourselves.

Most of us are actually addicted to the Internet. George Barna has documented in his studies how Americans are addicted to media and technology. One of

my colleagues teaches at a local university and challenges his students to go at least one day without their smart phone. Hardly any of the students can

survive a one-day fast from technology. We are used to a steady feast of entertainment and information.

The medium has become the source and often the message is irrelevant. We merely seek more entertainment and information from the devices we carry in

our pockets or purses. And if we do read books or magazines, more and more of us read them on those same devices we carry around with us. Most of our

information these days comes in digital form.

Marshall McLuhan was right. The medium has become the message. I’m Kerby Anderson, and that’s my point of view.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *