


|
Enter your query below to search our database containing over 50,000+ essays and term papers
Search results 3151 - 3160 of 5332 matching essays
- 3151: "All I Know Is What I Read In The Papers" - Will Rogers
- ... acquiring knowledge. Unfortunately, the media is not completely reliable as it can and has been manipulated by politicians, their parties, and their governments. This makes the media a powerful weapon as politicians use it to effect voters political choices through advertising, change popular opinion on issues of state, and debasing political campaigns through smear tactics. "You can make a candidate someone they aren't. You can protect them from someone they ...
- 3152: The Effects of Advertising on Society
- ... effects of advertising on society. Our moral values are being degraded by the bombardment of impropriety by the media. Adler would be quick in pointing out the reason why these messages have such a negative effect on people. There are two main tactics advertisers use to sell their product: either imply that their product will bring about the achievement of a particular (usually real) good, or make their product the object ...
- 3153: "Roseanne and The Kiss"
- ... has broken the perverted gay barrier, he has broken the black barrier. He has stepped out of the role of the thief and the sports star. There is no doubt that television has a huge effect on the way we see our lives and our words. In fact (in a slightly unrelated topic) I was watching an interview with Australian actor Jeffery Rush , who was describing how he learned about America ...
- 3154: What To Do?: Terrorism and the Media
- ... political change through fear. It is a combination of indoctrination and drama. The relationship between terrorism and the media is symbiotic. As terrorists require widespread attention, the media needs news (Miller v-vi). Terrorism in effect is a from of advertisement of the terrorists goals and what they want accomplished. In 1980 the New York Times printed a total of 916 articles on terrorist events. That means that terrorists were getting ...
- 3155: TV Violence
- ... Mass Media and Society" written by Dennis Howitt and Guy Cumberbatch. Howitt and Cumberbatch looked at social psychology, experimental psychology, sociology and phychiatry to come their belief that " mass media do not have any significant effect on the level of violence in society."( Howitt and Cumberbatch 1975 p.VII) Howitt and Cumberbatch looked at experiments, reports and studies and tried to figure out the meaning of each. They concluded that many ...
- 3156: Television and The Internet
- ... interest in the show in a unique, engaging, and seemingly effective manner. The newsgroups and chat lines provide the most interactive and by far the most absorbing facet of the internet which is having an effect on our experience with television. This is where the fans (or non-fans
) can express themselves and learn about the interests of others. The newsgroups are filled with questions, comments, remarks, and replies every day ...
- 3157: Television Censorship
- ... not have serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value." The Court has further held that obscenity should be determined by applying "contemporary community standards" rather than national standards (Microsoft Encarta 95)." WHO DOES TELEVISION CENSORSHIP EFFECT? CENSORSHIP AFFECTS MINORS AND ADULTS Does censorship affect both minors and adults? One incident in Ohio led a mother of a 5 year old boy to believe so. The boy's mother attributed his actions ...
- 3158: Star Wars: An Intergalactic Joyride
- ... assessment, is the way in which the movie celebrates the past and not the future. This aspect of Star Wars', Rothstein says, is what screams out in opposition to the high-budget, high-tech, special- effect spectaculars that it (Star Wars) spawned.' This is where, Rothstein says, that Star Wars' gets its authenticity. The whimsical ramshackleness is actually meant to be a sign of the heroes' authenticity: what is older is ...
- 3159: Man with The Movie Camera: Shot Change constructs a New Perspective
- ... well as in the daily lives of humans. With editing he utilized the essence of time to his advantage. Vertov wanted a certain rhythm of cuts to exist in the movie. He desired a choppy effect. The cameras, themselves, were supposed to produce a rithym in movements, too. The point was he wanted to make as many cuts and rigid motions as possible to make the film appear as hark jerky ...
- 3160: John Ford and Frank Capra: A Study of Their Movies
- ... and help society, while Ford's characters are almost incapable of helping themselves. (although Fonda in Grapes of Wrath speaks of wandering the earth to bring truth and justice to the world,) Fonda will only effect small minorities of people, while Capra's characters change the world. Yet both styles of character are modeled on the simple and common folk. They are naive to the world and as the movie progresses ...
Search results 3151 - 3160 of 5332 matching essays
|