question honestly or lie. If both answer honestly each receives $100. If one player answers honestly and the other lies‚ the liar receives $500 and the honest player gets nothing. If both lie‚ then each receives $50. a) Construct the payoff matrix Honest Player 1 Lie $100 $100 $500 $0 $500 $0 $50 $50 $100 $100 $500 $0 $500 $0 $50 $50 Honest P2 Lie b) What choice will each make? Is there a dominant strategy for either player‚ is who
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Contents Industry Introduction 2 Industry Profile 2 Television: 2 Film Entertainment: 3 Radio 3 Print Media 3 Music 3 Others 4 Industry Outlook 4 Area of Interest: TV Broadcasting 7 Indian Television Broadcasting Industry 7 Overview 7 Evolution 8 Industry Structure 8 Competition from Substitutes 8 Threat of Entry 8 Rivalry 10 Bargaining power of Buyers 10 Bargaining power of suppliers 10 External Environment 10 PEST Analysis 10 Effect on Industry structure 10 Key success drivers
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Karachi people or students purchase their product or brand according to their own choice or of their past experience rather than the marketing efforts made by the firms to remove brand stickiness from the mind of the consumer with the help of a TV advertisement.The Tv advertisement only tries to brainwash the mind of the consumer so that he or she can switch to a new
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General Motors Corp.‚ the world ’s largest automaker‚ has been the global industry sales leader for 75 years. Founded in 1908‚ GM today employs about 327‚000 people around the world. With global headquarters in Detroit‚ GM manufactures its cars and trucks in 33 countries. In 2005‚ 9.17 million GM cars and trucks were sold globally under the following brands: Buick‚ Cadillac‚ Chevrolet‚ GMC‚ GM Daewoo‚ Holden‚ HUMMER‚ Opel‚ Pontiac‚ Saab‚ Saturn and Vauxhall. GM operates one of the world ’s leading
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TESLA Motors IPO June 2010 By: Brad Taylor Tesla Motors‚ Inc. was formed in 2003 to design and produce affordable EV’s (electric vehicle) and sell into the mainstream market place. The company is in the auto manufacturing industry and the consumer goods sector. To sustain its significant cash flow needs to support its heavy research and development spending and growing infrastructure needs (dealerships)‚ the company completed a public offering in June of 2010 where it sold 13.3 M shares
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children. Journal of Communication‚ 30‚ 164-170. Casteel‚ M. (1993). Effects of inference necessity and reading goal on children ’s inferential integration. Journal of Educational Psychology‚ 88‚ 484-507. Chen‚ M. (1994). The smart parents ’ guide to kids TV. San Francisco: KQED Books. Collins‚ P. A.‚ Wright‚ J. C.‚ Anderson‚ D. R.‚ Huston‚ A. C.‚ Schmitt‚ K. L.‚ & McElroy‚ E. S. (1997). Effects of early childhood media use on adolescent achievement Collins‚ W. A. (1983). Interpretation and inference in
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Tesla Motors‚ Inc. Tesla Motors‚ Inc. (Tesla)‚ incorporated on July 1‚ 2003‚ designs‚ develops‚ manufactures and sells electric vehicles and advanced electric vehicle powertrain components. The company was founded by a group of Silicon Valley Engineers who saw an opportunity to mass-produce electric vehicles as substitutes for the ordinary gasoline powered vehicles. Tesla‚ which issued its IPO in 2010‚ became the second listed American motor company after Ford‚ which went public in 1956.Tesla owns
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Precedents for television that portrayed people in unscripted situations began in the 1940s. Debuting in 1948‚ Allen Funt’s Candid Camera‚ broadcast unsuspecting ordinary people reacting to pranks. It has been called the "granddaddy of the reality TV genre." Reality shows in India date back to the Channel V’s talent hunt for making of a musical band. The band of girls called Viva that emerged from this show enjoyed short-lived popularity but marked the beginning of reality shows in India. Superstar
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Competition for Viewers and Advertisers in a TV Oligopoly Hans Jarle Kind Norwegian School of Economics and Business Administration Tore Nilssen University of Oslo Lars Sørgard Norwegian Competition Authority Abstract We consider a model of a TV oligopoly where TV channels transmit advertising and viewers dislike such commercials. We show that advertisers make a lower profit the larger the number of TV channels. If TV channels are sufficiently close substitutes‚ there will be underprovision
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Digital Media Centers (2003) statistical findings show that 43 percent children under the age of two watch TV every day. By the age of two‚ 74 percent of all infants and toddlers have watched TV. On average children under six spend two hours per day in front of the TV screen. About the same amount time the children spend playing outdoors. Comparing TV watching to reading or being read to‚ TV viewing time is three times higher. According to Gordon (2009)‚ young children’s aggression increases by
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