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    amount of child’s media viewing to < one hour/day. The study used a random number function with equal numbers and all participants received materials and newsletters according to their groups. The intervention group (n=34) received communication about the effects of TV on health (outcome expectations), encouragement to the parents’ confidence (self-efficacy), and strategies to modify the TV viewing (volitional control). In the control group (n=32), the parents were asked to promote their child’s

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    The TV show I chose for a male focus is in the Sports category, specifically titled “NHRA Drag Racing”. A little context regarding the sport itself, it is one of if not the highest ranking professional automotive racing in the world, the sport is only place that features Top Fuel Dragsters and Funny Cars using Nitromethane for gasoline allowing them to travel a 1/4 mile in 3-4 seconds at over 300+ MPH. The announcers for the sport react to the male drivers by giving a high regard for their driving

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    In his groundbreaking book The Image, historian Daniel Boorstin described how our culture had created “a thicket of unreality which stands between us and the facts of life.”2 Taken together, telegraphy, photography, radio, cinema, and television brought forth the pseudo-event, an occurrence staged to call attention to itself. Boorstin was not just concerned with the now-familiar “photo-op” or “media event.” He put his finger on a much larger problem. Americans not only confused the copy with the

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    on the Train, Lena Dunham’s Girls, Disney Channel’s Girl Meets World, Stieg Larsson’s The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, Fox Network’s New Girl, CBS’s 2 Broke Girls, The CW’s Supergirl, Tina Fey’s Mean Girls… The list goes on. These popular books, television shows, and movies all feature middle to upper class white girls and women in their late teens and early twenties. The “girls” tend to be surrounded by drama

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    The topic we are discussing in this essay is if 2 year old children should increase their on-screen time or decrease it. One side of the argument doesn’t want the children to get more than 2 hours of on-screen time because they believe it may harm them. The other side of the argument wants the children to get the children to get 2 to 3 times more on-screen time because they believe it would benefit them in the long run. Alright readers can you just go on and read the next paragraph please I need

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    Television is an important educational tool in society, however, it does not have a place in presidential elections, due to the inequality and lack of substantive discussion in televised debates, as well as irrelevant physical standards being placed upon presidential candidates. Journalists agree that political debates are an ineffective method for deciding the leader of the country, and they are not worth the use of television resources. Should the decision of who is in charge of a massive country

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    Television is incorporated into my daily routine whether it is watching the news in the morning or a movie at night. When I watch the news in the morning I catch up on current events and other news. On the other hand. At night I watch movies for entertainment and enjoyment. Television is not just changing people into couch potatoes by watching “chasing fast cars, drinking lite beer, shooting each other t close range, etc.”, it also can be a daily tool to learn new things and catch up on current

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    imagine life without television, a microwave, or even air conditioning. Well, thanks to the 1930’s and 1940’s you aren’t devastated and grateful for what you have. In the early 1930’s air conditioning was invented by Willis Carrier. It was not like the air conditioning we have today, back then the air conditioning systems were not aimed at human comfort, however they were designed to control the humidity. Another invention that many people use today is colored television. In 1940 CBS began

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    life. In his article “The Postmorbid Condition”, Vivian C. Sobchack considers this aspect as a global carelessness and insensible desire for violence on the human flesh and environment. Furthermore, the absence of criticism against the violence on television or any other kinds of violence develops wrong stereotypes and social impressions on the common life. Form this ideology, Sobchack coins the term “senseless violence”, which is used as a fulfillment of the scene. In the most relevant cases, violence

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    In Radio Cultures: The Sound Medium in American Life, author Michael C. Keith and a professional team of contributors examine the history and profound cultural impact radio broadcasting had on the United States. Radio broadcasting as a media form grew in popularity after being introduced in 1920 and transitioned to regular broadcasting following World War I. By the mid 1920s radio broadcasting was the primary way most Americans received news and information, it was also the number one form of leisure

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