Ames2012

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Ames2012
BibType ARTICLE
Key Ames2012
Author(s) Kate Ames
Title Host/host conversations: analysing moral and social order in talk on commercial radio
Editor(s)
Tag(s) EMCA, Radio, Multiparty interaction, CA, MCA
Publisher
Year 2012
Language English
City
Month
Journal Media International Australia
Volume 142
Number 1
Pages 112–122
URL Link
DOI 10.1177/1329878X1214200113
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title
Chapter

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Abstract

Talk between dual (or triple) host combinations dominates breakfast and drive programs. These programs are chat based, and incorporate talk on a range of topics conducted for an overhearing audience, including talkback segments that involve callers. This article considers the features of chat-based programming, and proposes a framework for analysis into talk-in-interaction on this format. Using ethnomethodological approaches – conversation and membership category analysis – as the basis for analysis, this article argues that in addition to the influence of the ‘radio program’, there are three membership category devices that influence host/host talk. These are ‘telling stories’, ‘members of a team’ and ‘members of a community’. The ways in which hosts and callers orient to these have consequences that may lead to the overt or subtle exclusion, or otherwise, of members of the overhearing audience, and this approach encourages a systematic analysis of the type of community to which participants orient within particular program.

Notes