This essay analyzes contemporary media systems as infrastructures of visibility, attention, narrative, and emotional governance. Rather than treating media as content or communication, it frames media as an interlocking apparatus that structures what becomes visible, what remains invisible, and how meaning is produced, circulated, and eroded. Drawing from Stuart Hall, Foucault, Luhmann, McLuhan, Zuboff, Berlant, Ahmed, Debord, Baudrillard, Bourdieu, and Scott, the essay situates media within a broader political‑economic and sociotechnical landscape where platforms, advertisers, data brokers, and algorithmic systems co‑produce the conditions of public life. Integrating the SignalRupture (SR) canon—including Slow Harm Theory, Exposure Infrastructure Theory, Systemic Erosion Theory, the Eroded Subject, Semantic Governance, and Containment Architecture—the essay demonstrates how media infrastructures extract attention, circulate emotion, normalize harm, and generate subjects who are overstimulated, underinformed, and structurally exposed. Concrete examples illustrate how these dynamics manifest in practice: crisis cycles, outrage algorithms, viral harassment, doxxing, memeified politics, AI‑generated hyperreality, and the collapse of seriousness in public discourse. By reframing media as a governance architecture rather than a communication channel, the essay provides a structural diagnosis of how meaning, emotion, and perception are shaped in the post‑web era. It offers a unified theoretical account of media as an infrastructural system that governs social reality.
Signal Rupture (Sun,) studied this question.