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Television
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Television is one of the most studied media forms in communications courses, and it sits at the intersection of cultural studies, media literacy, media effects research, and public policy. Students write about it because it functions simultaneously as entertainment, news delivery, political platform, and social mirror. Its reach into American homes makes it a reliable subject for examining how mass media shapes attitudes, reinforces or challenges stereotypes, and influences public life. The Kennedy-Nixon debates, for instance, stand as a landmark case for understanding how the medium transformed political communication, while works like the soap opera form raise questions about genre, audience, and cultural value.

The papers archived under this topic take a wide range of approaches. Some examine media effects directly, asking whether television violence increases aggression in children or whether excessive viewing harms educational development. Others take a cultural criticism angle, analyzing how television shapes identity, perpetuates stereotypes such as the redneck stereotype, or represents women and reality in America. Policy-oriented essays engage questions raised by cases like Citizens United v. FEC, while more literary or comparative essays draw connections between television's social influence and dystopian works such as 1984 and Brave New World.

A strong essay on television narrows its scope to a specific claim about the medium's impact—on a demographic, a genre, or a social outcome—rather than arguing broadly that television is good or bad. Evidence drawn from documented programs, historical events, or peer-reviewed genre studies carries more weight than general impressions. The most common pitfall is conflating correlation with causation, particularly when arguing that viewing habits directly produce behavioral or developmental outcomes.

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Paper Undergraduate
Ideological Criticism Showtime\'s Drama Series
This essay examines the television show The L Word in order to see if its representation of bisexuals and transgendered people lives up to its ostensible ideology. Careful examination reveals that this is not the case, and that the show actually perpetuates reductive notions of bisexuality and transgenderism. In the end, one must conclude that The L Word merely uses female homosexuality to condemn less well-represented modes of human sexuality.
Research Paper Undergraduate
McDonald's advertising impact on children
Children are unfair victims of advertisers. Those younger than eight years old do not have the cognitive ability to understand that advertisers are just trying to sell them something.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Odontology in Criminal Justice Forensics
Odontology has been historically used or indeed, one might say misused within the framework of the judicial system to sway juries against factual evidence and to gain a conviction because the jury fails to understand or…
Paper Undergraduate
Lesbians in U.S. History Sexuality
Sexuality must not be thought of as a kind of a natural given power which tries to hold in check, or as an obscure domain which knowledge tries gradually to uncover. It is the name that can be given to a historical…
Paper Undergraduate
Smart Marketing: Effects of Databases
Smart Marketing: Effects of Databases and Algorithmic Advertising
Paper Undergraduate
Public service and competing ethical claims of public managers
Ethics is a philosophical concept that attempts to explain the moral organization within a given chronological time and cultural event. It is more concerned with understanding the way that ethnical ideas are presented,…
Research Paper Doctorate
Allen Ginsberg: Beat Poet Extraordinare
As one of America's most controversial poets of the mid to late 20th century, Allen Ginsberg, best-known for his radical poem "Howl" and for his outspoken views on American society, politics and the Vietnam War, was a…
Essay Undergraduate
Federal Communications Commission FCC
Communications have always been critical to humankind's existence and the absence of which means there would have never been the development and evolution of groups, organizations, societies and even nations.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Big Business George Stigler (the
George Stigler (the case against big business) is anti-big business. He defines big businesses as businesses that are large in size and also large relative to the industries in which they operate.
Paper Undergraduate
Retired Military Media Analysts Gates
Gates urges greater clarity by military media analysts: An overview of the U.S. Defense Secretary's position