Reality TV Essay

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    2006, The New York Times declared a positive trend in reality television. Amidst the “mean-spirited, bug-eating shows,” do-good programs had appeared to provide housing, healthcare and help to the needy. The TV network also pays for medical treatments not covered by health insurance, as was case in an episode featuring the Gibbs family of Florida, whose father and son underwent procedures to remove brain tumors that cost more than $100,000. Reality television shows have become more popular than ever

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    As I mentioned in my first media assignment Reality television shows are unconventional, but have been become the most popular shows on the television in our society. Nowadays the media wants reflects how families really are in society. There are different kinds of families with different diversity. From a very young age, the media influence us and put an image or a perception in our mind of a family. Over the years, the idealized version of a family has changed.as we have noticed family dynamics

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    of our words. The words we now propagate are riddled with infectious diseases. Upon us now, is the black plague of the 21st century, reality television. Viewers of media watch, raise your hand if you watch reality television. Bang, you’ve lost your values. Bang, your attitude has been corrupted. Bang, your beliefs have changed

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    Reality TV does not always suck, and it may even make us smarter. Many debates have been going around on why or why not Reality TV makes us dumber and has a negative effect on us. Human beings who watch Reality TV should be mature enough to handle that type of content. I believe people who watch Reality TV can become Smarter than a Fifth Grader. After reading article one, Why Reality TV Doesn’t suck, and May Even Make Us Smarter, I can say I fully agree with this article. The writer of this article

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    The article “Dumb TV,” published in the University of Regina Carillon on February 8, 2014, is a critique of the ABC reality TV show The Bachelor and The Bachelorette, produced and directed by Mike Fleiss (The Bachelor - ABC, 2016). Written in an informal style, Destiny Kaus’s article provides data to support her thesis that states, “Overall, I really do think these shows are exceedingly dumb and they shouldn’t exist because the process doesn’t work.” In the article, she presents her bias by arguing

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    watch reality TV for the pure enjoyment of humiliation? Reality shows such as The Bachelor/ette, Catfish, Wife Swap, and many others tend to have the same goal, which is humiliation (Interview). Why do shows like these attract people? What is real about reality TV? Are there any benefits to reality TV? Do people's morals match up with watching shows like this? Does watching these shows bring us together as a society? These are all questions that are commonly asked about reality TV. Reality TV has

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    The Truth About Reality TV "Reality TV is set up to make people entertaining. A good person with values and principles is not good television" a quote by Ronda Rousey a mixed martial arts artist. Many people believe or want to believe that reality tv is true, but many other people avoid it for the fact that it is obviously fake. I personally don't watch reality tv but for the sake of this essay, I watched a few episodes of many television series to see and determine what I think about them. The

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    the topic of reality television and its effects on society today. Some new information brought to light interesting thoughts, ideals, and research. "Fist-pumping beachgoers. Singers competing for millions. Survivors outwitting, outlasting and outplaying. Turn on the television and chances are you’ll see all of these things. Whether you’re watching MTV, OWN or a main broadcast network, nearly every channel is home to reality television," USA Today reports. In the early 2000's, Reality TV began to come

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    Many people consider reality television to be a waste of time, or ‘trash TV’, but in Laurie Ouellette’s essay “Reality TV Gives Back” she asks the reader to reconsider that idea. Ouellette argues that reality television can be used to educate and guide the public on civic functions, such as citizenship training, inquiry and exposition, and interrogation from the margins (67). While originally the teaching of these civic functions was associated with documentaries, they have been reformatted into

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    article Reality TV: Should We Really Watch? Elizabeth Larkins argues with the integrity of the genre of reality TV shows. She describes how watching one’s embarrassment or pain on TV and finding it humorous is wrong morally and mentally. Larkins describes how reality TV all began with one of the oldest reality shows “Candid Camera.” This show would broadcast hidden cameras of people in embarrassing or painful situations. It was a huge success, which ultimately started the popularity of the reality genre

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