THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN TV AND CULTURE
Keywords:
Key words : Internet ,media , mass media ,culture ,news, communication , TV, broadcast , programmes, reality ,shows , pop culture , viewers , transmitting .Abstract
Abstract: Since its inception as an integral part of American life in the 1950s, television has both reflected and nurtured cultural mores and values. From the escapist dramas of the 1960s, which consciously avoided controversial issues and glossed over life’s harsher realities in favor of an idealized portrayal, to the copious reality TV shows in recent years, on which participants discuss even the most personal and taboo issues, television has held up a mirror to society. But the relationship between social attitudes and television is reciprocal; broadcasters have often demonstrated their power to influence viewers, either consciously through slanted political commentary, or subtly, by portraying controversial relationships (such as single parenthood, same-sex marriages, or interracial couplings) as socially acceptable. The symbiotic nature of television and culture is exemplified in every broadcast, from family sitcoms to serious news reports. In this article I survey a number of key areas of debate: the relation between television, the nation and the state; television and the citizen/consumer, television content and performance.
References
RESOURCES:
John Spacey, March 02, 2020. Examples of Media Culture
John Perritano. What Is Reality TV's Influence on Culture
https://en.m.wikibooks.org/wiki/Main_Page
https://guides.library.cornell.edu/popular_culture.%E2%9C%A8