YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Film and Television
Essays 631 - 660
Health in 1982. The conclusion of the research that had been conducted in those ten years indicated that watching violence on tele...
type of violence on television shows be regulated? The immediate reaction to the question is: What about the First Amendment tha...
could readily relate. His approach to comedy was like his approach to life: if you cannot laugh, you cannot live. Indeed, Berles...
of the Long Island environment. II. TV REPLACES HUMAN IMAGES Like its computer counterpart, Mander (1978) indicates that televis...
wanted to visit. Perhaps the episode that most prominently features differences in race and ethnicity is when Jerry convinces the ...
watching audience of the 1970s, there has been a decidedly drastic change in the depiction of women as they appear in comedic role...
commercials featured models wearing bras over shirts. Things have changed drastically since those days. Station manager George Hul...
In five pages this research paper considers Schuller's storytelling in an analysis of communications theories and his television m...
to make it irrelevant whether or not the details are portrayed correctly. The distinction between narrative and fiction is that n...
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 fifteen pages and examines a campaign to target a certain audience with a television commercial on a weight...
children. Such television programs are important in that they "talk to kids" instead of talking down to them. There are many tha...
This paper consists of five pages and examines what hazards watching television represent for children. Two sources are cited in ...
This research paper consists of seven pages and analyzes the opinions of social critics regarding how print media is being dominat...
mission he will go berserk and get shot. Still, the show usually broached some touchy subjects, from officer corruption to cowardi...
In five pages this paper discusses how television and radio have been affected by the passage of the Telecommunications Act of 199...
In five pages this paper presents the argument that it is television that molds culture in America, not vice versa. Four sources ...
1977, p. 4). For children in particular, there is no activity that permits as much intake "while demanding so little outflow" (Win...
and ice creams sold in the summer, this looks at the trends rather than just the past performance. Regression analysis takes th...
products regardless of what purpose they served" (Trotter, 1992, p. 27). Targeting children leaves the door wide open to pl...
This paper concludes that, to an extent, media creates images of family life that viewers use to form attitudes about family, but ...
the technology supporting televisions emerge, with plasma, LCD the LEDs or being developed. The problems faced by 3-D television m...
Television has played a critical role in womens...
contention presented above. These ads show how if you just buy Vehicle X you can have the excitement of the sea kayaker and the m...
accident but by necessity-of course, I mean biological, not logical, necessity. Thus UG can be taken as expressing the essence of ...
are lacking in confidence so they believe what the media offers them. The following paper examines one media television show, "Ext...
(Summers, 2004). This switch back to pursing a doctors role sent a horrendous message concerning nursing to the viewing public. ...
or ideas. Coverage on an emotional level produces what he calls "a kind of shirt-sleeve imperialism," in which viewers "possess" p...
In six pages this paper discusses the underlying persuasive communications methods employed by psychic hotline TV commercials with...
the Science Guy. It took three years for the FCC to realize that the original Childrens Television Act did not possess the force ...