Audiences use the media to gratify specific needs that they have. If the media successfully gratifies this need it makes it more likely they will consume the product again. These needs are escapism, surveillance, personal identification and social interaction.
audiences wish to escape the mundane and repetitive elements of their life by experiencing things outside of their normal lives. This can include humour, excitement, fear, romance and other elements outside of the norm
audiences need to know about the world around them and seek texts that offer knowledge of the world. This is often seen in texts that give the news or show parts of the world that are unknown to the audience
suggests that audiences who are heavy consumers are effected more by the media than those who are light consumers. This in turn suggests that the media has a cumulative effect where the continued exposure to media will shift the views of an audience and impact them a greater amount.
the process by which people learn the requirements of their surrounding culture and acquire values and behaviours appropriate or necessary in that culture
the percentage of difference in response between light and heavy television viewers. Heavy TV viewers are affected more by the messages of the TV than light viewers.
the blurring, blending, and bending process by which heavy media consumers from disparate groups develop a common outlook on the world through constant exposure to the same images and labels
long-term exposure to television in which violence is frequent cultivates the image of a mean and dangerous world. Heavy Viewers reported that most people "cannot be trusted" and are "just looking out for themselves".
Audiences receive and understand the media in different ways based on their backgrounds and beliefs; their decoding of the text is effected by their pre-existing biases and beliefs that alter how they understand the text
describes the ability to influence the importance placed on the topics of the public agenda. If a news item is covered frequently and prominently, the audience will regard the issue as more important. This allows the producer of news media to influence what issues an audience may see as more important
the amount an audience member can act upon the media product; this may include altering the state of the product or simply be responding to the product
The act of producing or acting as part of a cultural movement; this could involve making memes, singing songs, cosplaying or just joining groups and discussing the texts
the act of an audience taking creative ownership of an existing media text and altering it to match their own needs; this may include producing original content with the original text as a strong influence all the way to bricolage replications of the original where it is used in new or different ways.