This study aims to examine the conservative-religious media experience through the concepts of habitus, field, and capital developed by Pierre Bourdieu. It argues that media experience cannot be explained solely through individual preferences or the direct effects of media content; rather, it should be understood as a relational process shaped by social structures, habitus, capital relations, and the dynamics of the media field. Accordingly, the study first discusses Bourdieu’s key concepts and then evaluates the media field in relation to meta-capital, legitimacy, and symbolic power. Finally, the conservative-religious media experience is analyzed through the relationship between habitus and the media field. As a theoretical study, it offers a conceptual framework for rethinking media experience within the context of social struggles, processes of legitimation, and relations of symbolic power.