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description of the state of commercial broadcasting in 1961 |
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Radio-Nixon won TV-Kennedy won effects of the medium |
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CBS News reporter, announced JFK and MLK's deaths |
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Reagan- so happy, no proposal, it's about feeling |
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Who shot JR was the advertising catch phrase, viewers had to wait all summer to find out |
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Not live TV anymore, able to edit footage and have reruns |
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50's, popular contestants given assistance by producers |
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Senator McCarthy was accused to pressuring the army, widely broadcasted |
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broadcast journalist, known for honesty, broadcasted Army-McCarthy hearings on See It Now |
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staging fake news- dynamite sale 1972 |
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analyzes the way content is carried across print and TV, the medium is the metaphor |
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can convery rational argument unlike TV because TV "excludes content" |
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primary menas of communication in our culture, excludes content |
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philosophy that people cannot govern themselves in a democracy unless they have access to the information they need for that governance |
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the free flow or trade of ideas serves to ensue that public discourse allows the truth to emerge because people are inherently good (John Milton) |
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Ad Hoc Balancing of Interests |
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several factors should be weighed in determining how much freedom the press recieves. Conflict-fair trial and freedom of press |
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false and malicious publication that damages a person's representation |
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spoken defamation of a person's character |
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the power of the government to prevent the publication or broadcast of expression |
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Top Secret Vietnam documents, given to New York Times, government got restraining order because of National Security Issues, Supreme Court lifts order because newspapers had the right to publish them |
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sexually explicit content (protected) |
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illegal pornography (unprotected) |
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FCC is limited to controlling the "flow of traffic" |
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required broadcasters to cover issues of public importance and be fair in coverage |
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required broadcasters to ascern or actively determine nature of audience's interest, conveience, and necessity |
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identifying and granting ownership, designed to protect creator's financial interest |
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exception to copyright, material can be used without permission or payment (ex. education) |
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Social Responsibility Theory |
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asserts media must remain free of government control, but in exchange, media must serve the public |
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Global Village and the medium is the message were his ideas |
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new communication technology will permit people to become involved in one another's lives |
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The Medium Is The Message |
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the form of a medium embeds itself in the message, creating a symbolic relationship by which the medium influences how the message is recieved |
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Technological Determinism |
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theory which points to technology as the force which shapes society |
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electronic coding or masking of information |
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electronic tracking of the choices we make online |
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widening disparity between communication technology haves and have-nots |
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lack of technological access among poor, certain races, disabled, and rural communities |
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people without prerequisite technology have diminished access to information that technology makes available |
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directs its efforts toward a host of public service campaigns |
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brands in a product category are essentially the same |
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highlighting the aspects of a product that sets it apart from other brands |
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one-second time slots, now appearing on some stations and channels |
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cramming more spots into a commercial break |
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a culture in which personal worth and identity reside not in ourselves but in the products with which we surround ourselves |
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FTC imposes to stop a deceptive ad |
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A new set of ads must be created that corrects the original misleading effort |
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little lie that makes advertising more interesting "whiter than white" |
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appealing to audiences defined by race, gender, class, etc. |
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Psychographic Segmentation |
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appealing to consumer groups with similar lifestyles, attitudes, values, and behavior patterns |
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analyzes how advertising has shaped modern society |
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Killing Us Softly 3- Jean Killbourne |
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analysis of advertising's depiction of women and gender stereotypes |
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invasion of indigenous people's culture by powerful countries through mass media |
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British channels must limit advertising and increase public affairs and documentary news programming in exchange for their broadcast licenses |
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government and media partnering to ensure that media assist in planned, beneficial development of the country |
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way of using media to serve the goals of revolution; overthrow government |
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authoritarian systems call for the subjugation of the media for the purpose of serving the government and uses media to propagandize goals |
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radio station to tell the world the US's point of view and to counter enemy propaganda and disseminate information about America |
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there should be no control over the media and complete freedom of speech |
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a really spread out group can come together quickly with an email thread, especially for protests |
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