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Mainstream Media
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Mainstream media refers to the dominant channels of mass communication — television networks, major newspapers, and large digital outlets — that shape public knowledge and cultural norms at scale. Students across communications, media studies, journalism, political science, and cultural studies encounter this topic because it sits at the intersection of information, power, and society. What makes it academically rich is the ongoing tension between media institutions and the publics they claim to serve, as well as the growing debate over who controls the news, how editors frame events, and what impact coverage has on identity, politics, and daily life.

The papers archived on this topic reflect a genuinely wide range of approaches. Some take a comparative angle, setting mainstream media against ethnic media or examining how Arab Americans were portrayed before and after 9/11. Others focus on cultural impact, exploring how American television shapes identity or how platforms like YouTube have disrupted traditional news ecosystems. Policy and political analysis appear in papers on Middle East peace coverage and questions of democracy, while sociological angles surface in work on male body image and acculturation among Taiwanese adult ESL learners. Photojournalism and tabloid media also draw attention to professional ethics and editorial standards.

A strong essay on mainstream media requires a clearly bounded thesis — arguing how a specific outlet, event, or demographic relationship demonstrates a broader pattern is more effective than making sweeping claims about "the media" in general. Evidence drawn from specific coverage examples, audience studies, or documented editorial decisions carries the most weight. The most common pitfall to avoid is conflating correlation with causation when assessing media impact on public attitudes or behavior.

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Paper High School
Stop Online Piracy Act
This law details the specifics of the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA). It presents pro-SOPA and anti-SOPA arguments. It discusses balancing the need for free speech with preserving the artist's right to profit off of his or her content.
Paper Doctorate
American Political Parties
From 1962 to his retirement in 1981, Walter Cronkite led America through such pivotal events as the Kennedy assassination, the moon landing, the Vietnam War, and the Watergate scandal as the anchor on the CBS Evening…
Paper Doctorate
Palestine, Joe Sacco Mainly Incorporates New Journalism
Joe Sacco uses new journalism techniques in his book, Safe Area Gorazde: The War in Eastern Bosnia and rejects objective reporting. The use of new journalism and dismissal of objective reporting techniques make his writing more credible. This essay aims at ascertaining whether the use of new journalism and rejection of objective reporting compromises the credibility of Sacco's book on the Bosnian war of 1992 to 1995.
Research Paper Doctorate
Gay and Lesbian Advertising in the Last Decade
¶ … advertising geared to the gay and lesbian communities. Specifically, it will discuss advertising in the context of gay and lesbian culture, and how particular ad campaigns are significant to the gay and lesbian…
Paper Masters
Environment the 11th Hour (Film): Global Warning/Climate
Global warning/climate change impacts all of humanity, and therefore it is not a local but a global concern that requires multidisciplinary intervention (general point made throughout film).
Paper Masters
Media Influence on the Vietnam War
Media Coverage and the Vietnam War: A Literature Review
Thesis Doctorate
Gene technology: applications and implications
This is a three page paper, and it is about one type of genetic technology that is controversial. The topic selected for discussion is genetically modified organisms, and genetically modified food in particular. The paper is divided into sub-sections. The first section introduces the technology and provides a rational for its selection. The second section describes the biological basis of the technology, and is followed by information about the ethical controversy.
Essay Doctorate
Future? How Will Writing Affect the Future?
Writing is probably the most important form of communication and it has shaped the course of human history and evolution. The historic role of writing is undeniable. It has, for instance, propagated the events of the…
Paper High School
How Media Contributed to Perception of War
In The Uncensored War (1989), David S. Halin divides the Vietnam War and the media coverage of it into three phases, 1961-65, 1965-68 and 1968-73. In the pre-1965 phase, before large numbers of American troops were in the country, the war received almost no TV or radio coverage, and a small number of journalists from the print media dominated coverage. Vietnam only became a television war or living room war with the big escalation in 1965-68, and the search-and-destroy strategy put in place by Gen. William Westmoreland.
Research Paper Doctorate
Censorship in Music
Censorship Under the Guise of Protecting the Children