The global space economy reached $613 billion in 2024, according to the Space Foundation, and commercial activity accounted for most of that total. That figure gives the role of media in the space industry a direct economic dimension, because space companies, government agencies, investors, insurers, regulators, suppliers, and end users all depend on information flows that convert complex activity into understandable public facts. Space media no longer means mission photographs, astronaut interviews, and launch-day television coverage alone. It now includes financial reporting, trade journalism, regulatory notices, livestreams, company updates, technical explainers, military-space briefings, scientific outreach, and public-warning communication tied to reentries, debris, satellite failures, or launch mishaps.