of girls who didn’t watch reality television shows. A further 38% of viewers admitted that they thought “girls are valued based on their appearance”‚ and 28% said that they would rather be recognised for their outer beauty than their inner beauty. “TV is a powerful influence on all of us‚ but particularly young girls who are looking for role models” says therapist Dr. Nancy Irwin. This may be one of the reasons that teenage girls commonly have body image issues. Shows that broadcast the rich and
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Cited: Gillham‚ Christina‚ and Anna Kuchment. "Kids: To TV Or Not TV." Newsweek 18 Feb. 2008: 60. Opposing Viewpoints in Context. Web. 24 Nov. 2014. <http://ic.galegroup.com/ic/ovic/MagazinesDetailsPage/MagazinesDetailsWindow?failOverType=&query=&prodId=OVIC&windowstate=normal&contentModules=&display-query=&mod
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CBS’s reality TV show‚ Hunted (2017)‚ features 18 contestants-participants who agrees to give up their freedom to become fugitives for 28 days. Within these days‚ contestants are under surveillance by a team of professional law enforcement officers and the last group that survives‚ wins two hundred thousand dollars. Compared to other fictional TV shows‚ the Hunted is inexpensive to produce as there is no need for CBS to pay celebrity actors or keep the participants for more than one season. Most
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Reality TV Response There is social value in the show Little People‚ Big World. There is value in the way that the family overcomes their disabilities and works toward their goals. As we saw in the first episode Matt‚ the father‚ has worked at his own business‚ which helps people with dwarfism‚ to get it to a point where he can make a significant amount of money from it. He started the business with the hope of just making extra side money not knowing where it would take him‚ but it grew to a
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References: * Poniewozik‚J. (2010) Why Reality TV is Good For Us. In A. N. Eken‚ B. Rodrigues‚ H. G. Atabaş‚ J. Harris‚ M. Güçeri‚ M. L. Bilgiç‚ S. Tack & Z. İ. ÖnelContemporary Issues In Focus (pp. 67-71). Harlow: Pearson Custom Publishing. * Rushdie S. (2010) Reality TV: a Dearth of Talent and the Death of Morality. In A. N. Eken‚ B. Rodrigues‚ H. G. Atabaş‚ J. Harris‚ M. Güçeri‚ M. L. Bilgiç‚ S. Tack &
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EXECUTIVE SUMMARY The report analyses the case study (The tribe has spoken: networks‚ marketers and viewers still love reality TV) on reality television shows. It identifies that the popularity of these shows among networks and marketers are due to monetary opportunities and brand awareness. These shows have psychological‚ social‚ cultural and personal effects on consumer behaviour has they learn and relate to the contestants situations and problems. This behaviour affects trends and patterns
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Problem Statement: The problem in this case is that KCDE-TV employees have the strong feeling of inequity. There are five related symptoms of this problem. First‚ the crew members have a common feeling that they were being “used” by management because they knew that many general office workers were earning more money and working shorter hours than them. Meanwhile‚ they felt that their jobs were more challenging and more valuable than those general office workers’. So they were supposed to earn
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The advantages and disadvantages of television Nowadays many people all over the world spent most of their free time watching television; but since its appearance‚ television has brought to man many advantages as well as disadvantages. First‚ television plays an important role in our daily activities: it keeps
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Cited: Johnson‚ Steven. Watching TV Makes you smarter. Stevens‚ Dana. “Thinking Outside the Idiot Box.” They Say‚ I Say with Readings. Ed. Gerald Graff‚ Cathy Birkenstein‚ and Russel Durst. New York: W. W. Norton and Company‚ 2009. 277-294. Print. Peacocke‚ Antonia. Family Guy and Freud:
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LSE Research Online Article (refereed) Sonia Livingstone Does TV advertising make children fat? : what the evidence tells us Originally published in Public policy research‚ 13 (1). pp. 54-61 © 2006 Blackwell Publishing. You may cite this version as: Livingstone‚ Sonia (2006). Does TV advertising make children fat : what the evidence tells us [online]. London: LSE Research Online. Available at: http://eprints.lse.ac.uk/1026 Available in LSE Research Online: May 2007 LSE has developed LSE Research
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