YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Anxiety Disorders on Television
Essays 391 - 420
In fourteen pages the ways in which the introduction of television cameras into the courtroom have affected courtroom proceedings ...
In three pages cable television is discussed in a consideration of its history that also includes various issues of relevance incl...
In eleven pages this report discusses how pay per view television is threatening the 'free' broadcasting of events such as major l...
of sexual activity, particularly among adolescents. Whos Responsibility? When the discussion revolves around children, th...
In ten pages this paper discusses changing attitudes between the 1960s and 1990s regarding the portrayal of sex by the mass media ...
In five pages the television version of Miller's tragedy featuring Dustin Hoffman is compared with the original play that starred ...
In five pages these American television figures are contrasted and compared in terms of the premature deaths of their sons which l...
In seven pages this paper discusses the U.S. space program in a consideration of such benefits as the national economy, Teflon®...
commercials featured models wearing bras over shirts. Things have changed drastically since those days. Station manager George Hul...
children. Such television programs are important in that they "talk to kids" instead of talking down to them. There are many tha...
In five pages the life and work of this pioneering television journalist are discussed in terms of childhood, family, and status a...
This paper consists of five pages and examines what hazards watching television represent for children. Two sources are cited in ...
In five pages this research paper considers Schuller's storytelling in an analysis of communications theories and his television m...
This paper consists of fifteen pages and examines a campaign to target a certain audience with a television commercial on a weight...
to make it irrelevant whether or not the details are portrayed correctly. The distinction between narrative and fiction is that n...
In five pages this paper presents the argument that it is television that molds culture in America, not vice versa. Four sources ...
or ideas. Coverage on an emotional level produces what he calls "a kind of shirt-sleeve imperialism," in which viewers "possess" p...
mission he will go berserk and get shot. Still, the show usually broached some touchy subjects, from officer corruption to cowardi...
In three pages this paper discusses how television families influence a child's images about his family and himself as Gary Soto's...
on society and human interactions. Even in family situations on evening sitcoms, the depiction of men and women and their roles ...
In ten pages the imagery featured in TV and films regarding the differences of class, race, and gender are the focus of this resea...
"Big Brother" of 12 percent, the show will be back in the lineup for the fall, along with a raft of other reality shows -- a fact ...
the media of the time (i.e. television and movies), as well as the impact of various frames of "official" reference such as census...
the entire clan is characterized as wealthy, stuffed shirts. This proves that not only are minorities the subject of stereotyping,...
insider activities by people such as Dennis B. Levine of Drexel Burnham Lambert during the 1980s can be considered quaint part of ...
find a bride?" Thomas recommends the Waverly Ballroom to Martys mother, who comically parrots his words precisely telling Marty t...
to conform to these, or to rebel against them. Thoman (2003) makes the point that the American Psychological Associations survey i...
dealt with it. But were the gender roles closer to the mark than other shows at the time? Perhaps. Clair Huxtable exampled the Af...
of a show called Wordpath, which is a 30-minute weekly public access television show about "Oklahoma Indian languages and the peop...
get together, there was the typical conflict one would expect from step-siblings who are still wary of one another, but who know t...