YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Popularity of the South Park Television Series
Essays 631 - 660
In ten pages this paper discusses television evangelists, the techniques of persuasion, and ethical considerations are also addres...
about in the womens movement. This phenomenon might be called the "Bachelor (or widowed) Father" decade. Television producers, ma...
In 2 pages this topic is examined within the context of Chan Khong, a Vietnamese nun who claimed that American television news cov...
an intriguing innovation when the Weather channel first aired, however. "From its start in 1982, The Weather Channel has been pel...
This paper examines the affects of television violence on American children. The author provides statistical data to support his ...
Art often imitates life, particularly in American media. This paper compares the media frenzy over the Clinton-Lewinsky affair wit...
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...
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 ...
commercials featured models wearing bras over shirts. Things have changed drastically since those days. Station manager George Hul...
In seven pages this paper discusses the U.S. space program in a consideration of such benefits as the national economy, Teflon®...
In five pages this paper discusses how television and radio have been affected by the passage of the Telecommunications Act of 199...
This research paper consists of seven pages and analyzes the opinions of social critics regarding how print media is being dominat...
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 ...
million and that the number of violent crimes committed by juveniles will more than double by 2010 (Briscoe, 1997). Unless action...
are disappointed if it doesnt. What kind of message does this send our children? According to Strasburger (1999, 103) it sends a...
smart enough to know that their world is not the same as the story worlds to which they are introduced at an early age. Bruno Bet...
to play unsupervised or accompany them to a park. Immense social and economic changes have dictated shifts in how families ...
reinforced over interactive learning, it can be stated. Shows such as Barney and Sesame Street encourage small spuds to become cou...
(Hoovers, 2003). Today, ABC broadcasts through 225 primary affiliate stations across the United States, it owns 10 television st...
of a television they will likely watch it. In addition, when people mindlessly watch television it is more likely the case that...
quality programs to choose from. While there is the hit series Friends, for example, there are few other comedies that can compete...
every single time she went to the library it would rain, but there can never be a cause and effect relationship. Similarly, there ...
find a bride?" Thomas recommends the Waverly Ballroom to Martys mother, who comically parrots his words precisely telling Marty t...
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 ...
of a show called Wordpath, which is a 30-minute weekly public access television show about "Oklahoma Indian languages and the peop...