Enjoyment and Appreciation as Motivators for Coping: Exploring the Therapeutic Effects of Media Messages on Perceived Threat

Authors

  • Jinhee Kim Pohang University of Science and Technology
  • Mina Tsay-Vogel Boston University

Keywords:

perceived threat, enjoyment, appreciation, social comparison, coping

Abstract

This study explores how experience-based media messages featuring victims, survivors, and outperformers provide therapeutic benefits through the enjoyment and appreciation of the messages. Using the economic crisis as a context, our findings indicate that whereas distressed individuals were more likely to appreciate threat-related stories featuring victims and survivors over outperformers, nondistressed individuals were more likely to enjoy such stories featuring outperformers over victims and survivors. Appreciation and enjoyment of these threat-related stories predicted effective coping outcomes: positive reappraisal of the economic situation that also led to increased perceived control over the threat through positive affect. Health implications for enjoyment and appreciation of experience-based stories as motivators for coping outcomes are also discussed.

Author Biographies

Jinhee Kim, Pohang University of Science and Technology

Jinhee Kim (PhD, Pennsylvania State University) is an Associate Professor in the Division of Humanities and Social Sciences at Pohang University of Science and Technology, Korea. Her research explores media and emotion, appeal of entertainment media, and cultural differences in mediated communication.

Mina Tsay-Vogel, Boston University

Mina Tsay-Vogel is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Mass Communication, Advertising & Public Relations and the Associate Director of the Communication Research Center at Boston University. She specializes in the psychological and social effects of mass media with an emphasis on entertainment and social media.

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Published

2016-03-29

Issue

Section

Articles