The quote of a Canadian communication scientist (Marshall McLuhan) (“The world has become an electronic village”) has become an archaic information compared to the great and rapid development of communication in the last two decades of the 20th century and what will happen later in the 21st century, to the extent that the world is called, thanks to the internet, a “Small screen” and this fact is a sign of the great progress that has been made in this field. As for the other statement of the Canadian communication scientist mentioned before “the medium itself, is the message”, it has been renewed and developed in its meaning and it’s purpose. Each new technical development in the means of communication necessarily means a media development in the content of the message if it has been properly formulated and used. When the TV broadcast began to be colored, its programs have become more attractive to the audience and more popular to reach its goals. Especially when it is planned to fit the goals set out in the TV message.
When satellite broadcast became to cover wider international areas from several different TV stations, planners began to rethink their previous plans of TV broadcasting to catch up with the fast growing development and the challenges, imposed by foreign satellite broadcasting, on national independent TV stations that consumes trending programs. There have been extensive changes in communication technology, especially in the field of audiovisual media during the 1980s and 1990s in Western Europe and the United States, which has led to the intensification of dialogue about the new roles of the media in the political, cultural and social spheres. Perhaps the most dangerous of these roles is what the media is doing in shaping certain patterns of human behavior and marginalizing other patterns through its languages and symbols. These new roles and their importance have been recognized by the governments in the industrialized North countries and can be carried out by the media to measure the efficiency of political and economic performance of contemporary systems.