YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Gender Friend and TV
Essays 391 - 420
and old alike, which is clearly a conscious choice on the producers part to attract this diverse audience to first watch Osmond fo...
to violence in the media and entertainment business as well, it has often been assumed that violence viewed on television can caus...
few shots of a good looking, blue-eyed young man. There is the glare of the sunlight which is rather obvious. One shot shows this ...
watching audience of the 1970s, there has been a decidedly drastic change in the depiction of women as they appear in comedic role...
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...
of a television they will likely watch it. In addition, when people mindlessly watch television it is more likely the case that...
but still protecting and serving in the community). Or they begin to "remember" world events as they are presented on television. ...
of a show called Wordpath, which is a 30-minute weekly public access television show about "Oklahoma Indian languages and the peop...
the entire clan is characterized as wealthy, stuffed shirts. This proves that not only are minorities the subject of stereotyping,...
and other shows have introduced a world of learning to toddlers and the preschool set. There are educational shows for adults and ...
yet learned to manipulate the public by means of psychological strategy; indeed, it has not been all that long since marketing cam...
in obscure settings where television was nonexistent. Then, another group with television was compared and contrasted to the origi...
In six pages this paper discusses how children should be protected from the onslaught of media violence with various studies also ...
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 ...
commercials featured models wearing bras over shirts. Things have changed drastically since those days. Station manager George Hul...
This paper consists of five pages and examines what hazards watching television represent for children. Two sources are cited in ...
In eleven pages this paper consider research regarding how perceptions of changing environment exacerbate crime fear. More than s...
of sexual activity, particularly among adolescents. Whos Responsibility? When the discussion revolves around children, th...
In twelve pages this research paper examines television viewing habits and why people watch what they do with various communicatio...
This was further supported by research conducted by the American Academy of Pediatrics, which concluded that, "Heavy exposure to t...
universities. The conclusion is that violence on TV is more prevalent than most had imagined. Nearly 2,700 programs were analyze...
In seven pages this essay condemns the increasing violence being shown on television and provides research study evidence regardin...
and current events. Television has of course been significantly refined from those very first efforts at image transmission...
In six pages this paper discusses how television coverage had a profound impact upon professional baseball in an evaluation of pro...
In five pages this paper discusses the adverse societal effects of sexuality that is featured in prime time television with a prop...
In three pages the aggressive, superiority, and cognitive humor theories are applied to this ABC television sitcom. There is one ...
In three pages cable television is discussed in a consideration of its history that also includes various issues of relevance incl...
In five pages this paper argues that television is not to blame for the increased violence in society as it merely serves as a mir...