YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :TV Violence and its Impact
Essays 271 - 300
or archetypes, tend to lend an instant type of history and emotional context for the character, it can be said. The hero, for exam...
The writer describes two legal cases (installation of a staircase that is not the one agreed upon and a satellite TV that does not...
mini-series The Stand, for which he won a SAG award, and he also received an Oscar in 1995 for Best Supporting Actor in the film F...
opening season episode was played more for laughs, as it involved Rachel, one of the group of friends, who had just escaped from h...
In five pages this paper discusses Lou Ferrigno's life and career as an actor most notably in the TV series The Incredible Hulk. ...
the Science Guy. It took three years for the FCC to realize that the original Childrens Television Act did not possess the force ...
200,000 violent acts on television alone" (Chatfield, 2002; p. 735). The study indicated that "Between the ages of two and 18, an ...
basis for women to be perceived within the myriad literary components, the feminist critical theory serves to create a semblance o...
(Fetto and Lach, 2000, p. 9). Geographically speaking, 74 percent of these attendees live in the Western United States as opposed...
of those who pursue technological determinism in its most extreme form believe that society is determined by technology -- that ne...
scientists, parents and educators are becoming more and more concerned about the influence television has on the lives of American...
plans in place which have proven themselves useful for normalizing the behavior and thought patterns of OCD individuals. These tr...
could readily relate. His approach to comedy was like his approach to life: if you cannot laugh, you cannot live. Indeed, Berles...
work they do or is it just a means to bring home a paycheck? Another mistake many managers make when hiring for employment is in ...
intelligence as seen in the character of the Fonz. "When Arthur (Fonzie) Fonzarelli appeared on the screen in 1974, with his slick...
Billy would certainly have a stronger case against the Daily Gossip; however, because freedom of the press protects the publicatio...
at a blackboard writing words. As soon as he completes the "d" in the last word the tape is over. The running time for the tape is...
hunters, they had to cooperate. In addition to cooperative hunting behaviors, this also led to the development of eating as a soci...
In three pages this paper discusses the reception of the novel Oranges Are Not the Only Fruit by Jeanette Winterson in comparison ...
This paper pertains to the manner in which TV portrayals of the American family have changed over the last five decades. Also, t...
This essay pertains to "Drunk History," a TV show in which participants describe instances from history while inebriated. The writ...
This essay relates the writer's personal impressions of forensic science having read several books on the subject and viewed foren...
This paper presents a summary and analysis of a scene in "The Temptations," which is a 1998 TV movie that focuses on the 1960s mus...
short time, then "showed up, unannounced, at Carnegie Mellon University (then called Carnegie Tech) with just a sheaf of designs f...
14 hours per week of television and spend an average of 6-7 hours per day viewing various media" (LeBlanc, 2003, p. 329. Furthermo...
hours each. The first disk is concerned with the description of the crime and the selection of the jury; the second covers the pro...
("Gypsy"). Similarly, insight is gained into Roses character when she begins a tentative romance with Herbie. In their duet "Sma...
revulsion to blood and gore that the researchers discuss as one of the desensitizing aspect of exposure to violence. Parents watch...
and still garner high ratings. Lets try and invent a different sort of reality show. Devising the concept is the hardest part of ...
mayor. Lucie begins to fulfill her ambitious dreams. Episode 4, "The New Road, 1938" and Episode 5, "Up and Away and Back, 1939," ...