Television Sitcom Essay

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    social class in American sitcoms, Post-Fordism, and televisual Black fatherhood. To start with, Richard Butsch’s piece Six Decades of Social Class in American Sitcoms explores the scattering of representations that explains class relations of modern-day capitalism. Butsch highlights that the corporate control of the nationwide television business has been manipulating the portrayals of working-class men as mainly “buffoons” on, just about, 400 prime-time television sitcoms, such as I Love Lucy, The

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    Compromises to Satisfy Network Profit Motives A sitcom, is short for "situation comedy", it is a genre of television centered on an established set of characters. Sitcoms originated in radio, but throughout the years and the increased popularity they are now generally found on television. Ccountless sitcoms have been aired over the generations creating a multimillion dollar revenue for this genre. Broadcasters use manipulating strategies to determine the production of shows that would air on their

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    Abc Popular Culture

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    According to Professor McNamara, children’s television was the “niche television” in that it was the first genre a network branded itself around (McNamara). The first experimentation with branding began in cable television with Nickelodeon. Sarah Banet-Weiser, author of “The Nickelodeon Brand: Buying and Selling the Audience,” states that Nickelodeon successfully branded itself as

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    Cosby Show’s Context in American Television The Cosby Show, was developed by actor Bill Cosby as a means to address the issues of negative black stereotyping in American media. Cosby set out to change how the media characterizes “typical black family in America. To undo what the misconceptions and misrepresentation of African Americans in earlier television shows. To change our society's perceived notions of African Americans For in the early years of television, African Americans were characterized

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    I Love Lucy Pros And Cons

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    According to Mitchell Stephens at NYU, the first electronic television was invented in 1927. In its infancy, television was, in the most basic sense, radio with moving pictures. However, during the “Golden Age” of television, around the mid-to-late 1950s, it become a mass medium (Stephens). During this time, television was the easiest way to shape public opinion, and politicians, advertisers, and producers took advantage of this. Perhaps one of the most popular programs in its time, and certainly

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    Textual Analysis: Friends

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    30 March 2015 Friends, Makes Life Better Before the 1994 television season started, networks were declaring that the upcoming fall season was going to be the “Year of the Family”. Many creative powers were aiming to capitalize on the familiar formula of relative-based series with shows like: Family Matters, All-American Girl, Me and The Boys, Full House and Party of Five. On September 22, 1994 David Crane and Marta Kuffman created a new sitcom by the name of Friends and it featured an unconventional

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    The spread of television has affected American households universally, which started in the 1940s but has continued to make a dramatic surge. There is a trend at that is being captured across televisions in households everywhere. Politics, reality television, social media and public information is being broadcast from household to household. Television has in a way become a mode of how we think and interact with each other. Television is starting to leave that bubble where it was strictly entertainment

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    Birdie Chen BEWITCHED The ’60s were undoubtedly the top point for high-concept sitcoms and because of the historical and societal shifts during the ‘50s, the “fantastic sitcoms” arose. The fantastic sitcoms were a hybrid genre that mixed the conventions of the suburban sitcom with imagery of the new frontier, offering a diverse perspective of the social world. The intricate bond between suburban sitcom and space imagery may be a reaction to the most tumultuous decades of America. First of all

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    Television, since its inception, has had a knack at being a mirror for the current state of society. Through this medium, one is easily able to spot the changes our culture has gone through since TV was first created. One example of this social shift, is that of the woman's role in television starting from the 50’s to the present. In 1950’s America, the personification of women depicted on television was simply that of a housewife. Passive, cheerful, and obedient: these are a few of the common traits

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    52 million television set in American homes. Today, approximately, 285 million televisions sets are in American households. Almost every Americans own a television in their homes and it is the one of the most popular electronics devices. Since the invention of television, television had impacted the world of entertainment. In 1960s, television was founded mostly on political forces. While the modern world, television was created on drama and entertainment. The transition of television shows in the

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