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Entertainment
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What is Entertainment?

Entertainment as an academic subject spans media studies, cultural studies, economics, and communication courses. It invites students to examine how societies produce, consume, and assign value to leisure and spectacle. What makes it intellectually compelling is the tension between entertainment as a commercial industry and as a cultural force — one that shapes language, identity, and shared reality. The topic demands that students think critically about power, asking who controls the forms of entertainment available to audiences and what ideological work those forms perform.

The papers archived here reflect a genuinely wide range of approaches. Some take an industry or market analysis angle, examining companies and economic structures such as the cruise line industry or executive compensation for athletes and celebrities. Others pursue cultural and social analysis, investigating how television affects everyday speech, how a reality show like the Kardashians program relates to a real ethnic community, or how pub and nightclub hours produce social effects. Media technology and measurement also appear as frameworks, with papers addressing audience rating systems and the debate over whether entertainment belongs inside news broadcasting.

A strong essay on entertainment needs a focused thesis that commits to one dimension — economic, cultural, linguistic, or political — rather than treating the subject as a vague backdrop. Evidence carries the most weight when it is specific: industry data, close textual analysis, or documented social outcomes drawn from credible sources. The most common pitfall is conflating description with argument, summarizing what entertainment is rather than making a defensible claim about how or why it functions the way it does in a particular context.

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Research Paper Doctorate
Thomas Edison and the Invention of the Light Bulb
¶ … life of Thomas Edison and how he changed the world with the invention of the light bulb. The writer explores the importance of the light bulb and credits Edison with single-handedly changing the world through its…
Essay Doctorate
Science and Fiction: Moon, Oryx and Crake, and Spore
Science and fiction are interrelated when it comes to the overall theme of the film "Moon", the book "Oryx and Crake", and the article "Evolution, Creativity, and Future Life". In order to depict all possible scientific advances to a much broader audience, it is presented as a fictional portrayal. By doing so, ideas that may not be ethically permitted in real life are possible through these mediums.
Research Paper Doctorate
James Baldwin's Notes of a Native Son: Race and Identity
James Baldwin published his book Notes of a Native Son in 1955 at the urging of his friend Sol Stein. The book is a collection of nine essays he had written on the state of what were then called "Negroes" in the United…
Essay Masters
History of Printed Newspapers and Radio Broadcasting in the US
Trace the history of the printed newspaper and various types of eras in reporting news
Paper Undergraduate
Why Americans Embraced the Patriot Act: A Philosophical View
This paper examines the reasons that led Americans to support the Patriot Act. It focuses on the philosophies of Rousseau and Adam Smith (Wealth of Nations) as well as Hamilton's Federalist No. 23 and De Tocqueville's assessment of one of America's deeply embedded oxymorons--the practice of religious liberty and what that entails.
Research Paper Doctorate
University Sports Marketing: Boosting Attendance and Revenue
The business situation: problems and solutions
Research Paper Doctorate
Eastman Kodak Marketing Strategy Plan Analysis
Kodak has come a long way ever since it was founded by George Eastman dating back to 1888 with the slogan "you press the button, we do the rest," that gave the first simple camera in the hands of a world of consumers.
Paper Undergraduate
North Korea's Political Dynasty: A Review of Kimjongilia
As a historical documentary, a significant portion of the content consists of interviews, necessarily. A documentary full of "talking heads," (a term used in the film and media industries to indicate what is only on the screen i.e. people talking) is boring and loses the audience almost immediately. Variety keeps documentaries interesting no matter how compelling the subject matter, as is the case of the subject matter of "Kimjongilia."
Research Paper Doctorate
Amusing Ourselves to Death: TV News as Entertainment
In Chapter Seven of Neil Postman's book Amusing Ourselves to Death, the author critiques television news, claiming that its flashy format has reduced reality to fluff for entertainment value.
Paper Doctorate
Verizon FiOS TV Marketing Strategy and Analysis
This paper presents a market case analysis for Verizon FiOS TV offered by Verizon Communications. The analysis consists of product, pricing, promotional, and distribution strategies which Verizon Communications should follow in order to operate in the industry in the most competitive and profitable way. The analysis of industry and competition is also given as a part of marketing research strategy. This paper presents a market case analysis for Verizon FiOS TV offered by Verizon Communications. The analysis consists of product, pricing, promotional, and distribution strategies which Verizon Communications should follow in order to operate in the industry in the most competitive and profitable way. The analysis of industry and competition is also given as a part of marketing research strategy.