Television Programs essay topics

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  • Scrutinizing The Effects Of Television Violence
    1,746 words
    Media Violence and the Effects It Has On Children The media clearly has an impact on our lives and especially the young, impressionable and weak-minded people in our society. Children become desensitized to violence when they see it everyday on TV, in theaters and even in video games. They are not becoming properly aquatinted with what is real, what is not, and the effects of it all. Even TV news deadens anyone's perception of reality. People of all ages especially those who are at an impression...
  • Aggressive Behaviors From Violence On Television
    1,638 words
    Children and the Media A look at the history and future of televised violence For some children, under some conditions, some television is harmful. For other children under the same conditions, or for the same children under other conditions, it may be beneficial. For most children, under most conditions, most television is probably neither particularly harmful nor particularly beneficial. W. Schramm, J. Lyle, and E.B. Parker. Television in the lives of our children Stanford: Stanford University...
  • Television Violence Issue Needs
    2,959 words
    A Practical Approach to Television Violence As difficult as this issue is, I believe it can be addressed. My report shows that some progress has already begun in several areas. Attention needs to be focused on how and why some programming has begun to move in the right direction and why the rest has not. "What this issue needs, more than anything else, is cool heads on all sides of the problem: the network executives, the creative community, the government, researchers and advocacy groups. All s...
  • Content Of Our Television Programming
    877 words
    I wanna be a Nickelodeon kid!" the five year old chanted and swayed along with the hyper-colourful cavorting youngsters on the commercial. Even after the TV was off, she hopped around the room proclaiming her desire to belong to the Nickelodeon network. We know the girl didn't realize what she was saying, but it's an excellent example of how malleable human beings are. Television is an unprecedented powerful medium, combining rapid sight and sound in a way that has a tremendous and impacted psyc...
  • Television Program 60 Minutes
    1,626 words
    27 Years of Influential 60 Minutes Since 1968 America has been better enlightened than previously concerning current events and happenings around the world. A considerable factor for this occurrence is the television program 60 Minutes which debuted on the air in September of 1968. Many other television newsmagazine's have been produced since its creation, however none have possessed the longevity nor the influence of 60 Minutes. Infact, 60 Minutes, which is owned by CBS News, was the first regu...
  • Fight Over The V Chip
    704 words
    Young children watch 8,000 murders and 100,000 acts of violence before leaving elementary school. The V-Chip Controversy Thousands were infuriated... lawyers and the TV Networks called it unlawful as it violates the First Amendment, parents were happy to have the help, and kids were angry because they could no longer see some of their favorite shows. The fight of the century had begun between the television industry and the government over the issue of television violence. In 1991 when Tim Colli...
  • Programs On Television
    1,513 words
    TV rots the senses in the head! It kills the imagination dead! It clogs and clutters up the mind! It makes a child so dull and blind. He can no longer understand a fantasy, A fairyland! His brain becomes as soft as cheese! His powers of thinking rust and freeze! An excerpt from Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, By Roald Dahl, 1964 When George Orwell's epic novel 1984 was published in 1949 it opened the public's imagination to a future world where privacy and freedom had no meaning. The year 198...
  • Watch Canadian Television
    4,127 words
    The definition of culture, as will be referred to in this paper, is: The sum total of the attainments and behaviour patterns of any specific period or people. The culture of a nation is representative of its national identity. As a nation's identity is closely tied to its cultural vibrancy, it therefore stands that mass cultural pursuits are indicative of nations. The most pervasive cultural pursuit is that of television viewing. An analysis of the viewing habits of a nation will reflect that na...
  • Gangs And The Peer Pressure
    2,093 words
    One Friday afternoon I was sitting in the crowded lobby of my doctor's office, waiting to be called in to be seen. Sneezes, coughs, and children's conversations could be heard throughout the office. The young girl sitting next to me, who I assumed was about 15 years old, was very impatient as to waiting to be called in by a nurse. She kindly asked me what time it was and that's when our conversation sparked. I learned that her name was Ashley and that she was 17 years old. When Ashley was only 4...
  • Sex And Violence Within Television Programs
    1,915 words
    Television Programs: How It Affects Society "It was an accident", proclaimed Janet Jackson after her Super Bowl fiasco, "a wardrobe malfunction". It didn't appear to be one to the millions of people who witnessed the exposing of one of Jackson's breasts. Many were shocked and outraged, but this type of thing isn't new for the infamous "boob tube". In 1977, the miniseries "Roots", was the first TV show to air bare breasts (Clark 1070). Even still, television programs have come a long way since th...
  • Most Popular American Programs
    1,462 words
    ESCAPING EXTINCTION Much has been written, and even more said, about what constitutes the Canadian character, what identifies the quintessential Canadian. Two features clearly emerge as dominant elements in the make-up of both English and French-speaking members of our family: Canadians are constantly brooding over who we are, what gives us our Canadian character, and what makes us different from other nations. Most other nations never think about such things, or take the answers for granted. Se...
  • Television Programming
    997 words
    Problem Programs Robert MacNeil began his article the, "The Trouble With Television", with the overwhelming statistic that the average television viewer squanders one thousand hours per year watching television programming (MacNeil). One thousand hours is a tremendous amount of time squandered watching programs with unchallenging content, this time could be better spent earning a college degree or perhaps earning various languages (MacNeil). I concur with MacNeil that television does "discourage...
  • Television
    451 words
    Why Televisions Should Be Unplugged I believe all the televisions in America should be unplugged, and we should become a nomadic, goat-herding race- well, maybe not the part about the goat herding. Anyway, television programming is corrupting our youths' minds; they are being stupefied and are becoming virtual vegetables as they are molded by the programs they view to be lazy, selfish, and to forsake all their moral and ethical values. The so called "entertainment value" to the shows is what's h...
  • People For The Censorship Of Television
    1,275 words
    Television Censorship Television is a very important part of the American society today. It is estimated that "the average American watches up to 6.75 hours of television daily" (F lahey 35). But does something that is such an influence on the American society need to be censored Chambers' English Dictionary defines Censorship as "the authorization to examine books, films, television, or other material and remove or suppress what is considered objectionable" (50). When anything goes through a pr...
  • Motion Picture Code And Rating Program Needs
    1,360 words
    The movie industry became a big hit in America after 1910. These movies were silent movies so therefore; we didn't have the problem with vulgar language. The first spoken movie was in 1927, called The Jazz Singer. At that time, the movie industry was so worried about keeping his or her audience happy and didn't want to offend anyone. That we didn't have the problems that we have today. In 1922, William H. Hays founded the Motion Picture Producers and Distributors of America. This organization, w...
  • Postman's Theories To Television
    2,473 words
    In Chapter 8 of his book Amusing Ourselves to Death, Neil Postman talks about the phenomenon of religious programming on television. He concludes that there are several characteristics of television and its surround that converge to make authentic religious experience impossible. (p. 118) I believe that though it's not explicitly stated, the concept of boundaries which I have been discussing is an essential element of his argument. He says that there is no way to consecrate the space in which a ...
  • Trend Of Current Political Debates On Television
    951 words
    Neil Postman's Amusing Ourselves to Death: Public Discourse in the Age of Show Business was published in 1985. Postman goes to great detail in his book about the development of public discourse (verbal and written communication) over the centuries. He explains how the development and evolution of communication over mankind's history has changed at critical points. These critical points include the development of the alphabet, the printing press invention, the progress of the telegraph and the cr...
  • People Watch Television
    1,307 words
    Why The H Is Everything Censored? Essay, Why The H Is Everything Censored? Have you ever sat down on a Wednesday night with a hot buttery bowl of popcorn and a cold soda to watch your favorite movie in its television debut? Watching closely with anticipation you prepare yourself for the great action and drama that captured your imagination when you originally saw it in the theater, only to find that every swear word and potentially offending scene has been dubbed over or removed. Don't you love ...

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