BBC television drama Essays

  • Doctor Who Blind Optimism

    984 Words  | 2 Pages

    hundred ninety-seven episodes in twenty-six years. Doctor Who also holds the longest television series and has a very large fan base. People that are sucked into the Doctor Who cult, are called Whovians. They are the die hard Doctor who fans that go to Comicon and dress as The Doctor, their companions, and even The TARDIS , which one might even see a Dalek or two. Doctor Who is a British television series that airs on BBC 1. The show is about a Time Lord whose home planet is Gallifrey, and The TARDIS

  • British TV Drama

    1228 Words  | 3 Pages

    British TV Drama To what extent has British television drama contributed to a public discourse on major political and social issues, both in the recent past and during the 1960s. Please draw on specific examples in presenting your argument. In this essay I will discuss how political and social issues have been raised in British television drama and also how they relate to public discourse in Britain. I will discuss TV dramas such as Our Friends in the North, Talking to a Stranger, Cathy Come

  • Impact Of Television Violence In Relation To Juvenile Delinquency

    2470 Words  | 5 Pages

    how does television affect our children? Many adults feel that because they watched television when they were young and they have not been negatively affected then their children should not be affected as well. What we must first realize is that television today is different than television of the past, violence is more prevalent in todays programming unlike the true family programming of the past. EFFECTS OF TELEVISION - THE BEGINNING Questions about the effects of television violence

  • Extended Families

    586 Words  | 2 Pages

    Extended Families The evolution of extended families has progressed far from the early black and white episodes of The Addams Family, to the country life of The Waltons, and to the crazy lives of the family in Full House. It is clear that the changes in the portrayals of families provide audience members with a picture of families being more complex if nothing else (Bryant, 2001). Therefore, it is certain that each decade has surpassed the other in its growth and development of extended families

  • Ethics in Reality TV Shows

    2420 Words  | 5 Pages

    other contestants.” This is one of the scenes I saw a couple of weeks ago in the Reality TV show, "Fear Factor". Technology has greatly progressed specially in the area of multimedia communications of which television is one of them. From the very first black and white television drama, “The Queen’s Messenger” up to current full-colored “reality TV” show “Joe Millionaire”, a lot has happened. Below is the table of the different eras of TV Programming and their corresponding brief descriptions:

  • Television Violence

    665 Words  | 2 Pages

    Television Violence The article “Television Violence: The Power and the Peril” is an article written by George Gerbner in 1994 that covers information about television violence over a period of twenty one years. Gerbner’s purpose in this article is to address the audience about the problems that exist in television today. This article covers a very big controversy that has brewed up in our society. The controversy is that there is way too much violence on television, and therefore it could be affecting

  • Dawson’s Creek, the Movie Woo, A Perfect Storm, and A River Runs Through It

    1128 Words  | 3 Pages

    through everyday life. One of these skills is the combination of watching and reading. It is not just the ability to watch and read, it is how well he can incorporate these skills into a written work. Television and the movie screen can also be tools in a writer’s tool belt. Dawson’s Creek (a television drama) and the movie Woo have aspects incorporated into each whole, these aspects finding comparisons in literature. There is no far stretch required to find a correlation between a screen work and a written

  • Television Drama

    1894 Words  | 4 Pages

    The viewer positioning in television dramas play a very important and critical part in how the drama is portrayed to the audience, and hence this gives an idea on how successful the show will be. Dawson’s Creek is a relatively new TV drama aimed at teenagers and the issues they face and have to deal with in society today. The viewer positioning, in relation to the show’s themes, construction and values will be discussed and analysed. The “Pilot” episode (first episode of Dawson’s Creek) will be referred

  • Impressions of Aging and the Elderly in Country Music

    5932 Words  | 12 Pages

    stereotypes and attitudes held toward the elderly. A review of previous studies in the area indicates that researchers have examined aging in jokes (Davies, 1977; Palmore, 1971; Richman, 1977), birthday greeting cards (Demos and Jache, 1980), television drama (Harris and Feinberg, 1978), poetry (Clark, 1980; Sohngen and Smith, 1978), newspapers (Bochholz and Bynum, 1982) and literature (Janelli, 1988; Loughman, 1977; Sohngen, 1977). Of particular interest and importance to this study is the recent

  • Spiral of Silence

    1740 Words  | 4 Pages

    Public communication is very important when in a discussion with coworkers and such. The one weakness that some people run into is silence. The spiral of silence theory by Elisabeth Noelle-Neumann explains why certain people fall under the pressure and seclude to silence. Silence may not always be a bad thing, but according to a study by Lucy J. MacGregor, the fact is that silence during a speech or conversation is absolutely bad. With this, silence while talking to a large group negatively affects

  • Elegy For Jane, My Student Thrown By A Horse Analysis

    2111 Words  | 5 Pages

    April 24, 2014. That day, I wore my black suit. I was in a large crowded room. People throughout the room smiled with tears and teared up when telling stories. Suddenly, the room became silent as the doors shut; the funeral service for my friend’s dad was about to begin. I regretfully remember that throughout the service I fought to contain my tears. For some unknown reason, I felt that it was unacceptable for me to cry for someone else’s dad. I thought that society would not acknowledge my grief

  • Changes in the American Family Since 1970

    634 Words  | 2 Pages

    In the past 60 years there have been a significant amount of changes that have occurred within the American families. Throughout the years times have changed in both the workforce, and simply in the home. The ways things are done in the home have drastically changed from how they used to be. During the video clip Changes in the American Family Since 1970 we were learning about the changes that had occurred in American families since 1970, which have, even since then, changed in other ways. At the

  • The Dramatic Devices in Our Day Out by Willy Russell

    1476 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Dramatic Devices in Our Day Out by Willy Russell Willy Russell, the author of ‘Our Day Out’ was a playwright in Liverpool writing at a time when there was a high level of unemployment and a feeling that even with an education there was little work available. In the inner city areas there were low levels of literacy, schools attempted to deal with the disaffected students in special classes. Willy Russell grew up in Liverpool and worked in various jobs there in his adult life, so

  • The Characters of Mrs Kay and Mr Briggs in Willy Russell's Our Day Out

    1627 Words  | 4 Pages

    The Characters of Mrs Kay and Mr Briggs in Willy Russell's Our Day Out On 28th December 1977, a play was televised on T.V for the first time. The play, called "Our Day Out", written by Willy Russell, was about a progress class going on a day out to Conwy Castle, in Wales. It focuses on two main characters, Mrs Kay and Mr Briggs, both teachers in an inner-city Liverpool school. Both of these characters are very different in image, behaviour and attitude to teaching. Mrs Kay is a teacher

  • Beth Blue Swadener's Article Children and Familes: At Promise

    1367 Words  | 3 Pages

    “At Promise”: Children and Families When an individual hears the words, ‘at risk’, they immediately think of all the negative characteristics of terminology: teen pregnancy, troubled teens, gang bangers, drop outs, substance abusers, and so on. I know I sure did. In reading Beth Blue Swadener’s article, “Children and Families “at Promise”: Deconstructing the Discourse of Risk”, I’ve learned that there are so much more to labeling at student ‘at risk’. There is actually a history behind the meaning

  • Crime Drama on British Television

    861 Words  | 2 Pages

    Crime Drama on British Television The relevant industry for my crime drama is obviously television. In Britain there are five terrestrial Channels, which include BBC 1 and 2, Independent Television ITV, Channel 4 and Channel 5. Each of these is an example of an institution in the television industry with their own ethos, programme schedules and style. The television industry began with BBCTV which launched in 1936 to a minority audience and was part of the BBC’s then media

  • The Role of Science Fiction Serial Doctor Who in British Culture

    1561 Words  | 4 Pages

    “fan-academic” Matt Hills and “TARDISbound” by Professor of Art History Pier D. Britton). Since the late 1970s, BBC as well began to produce documentaries to show the “behind the scenes” of the series and provide some clarification, and in 2004 BBC archives were opened and their documents published online, thus making original sources about “the genesis of Doctor Who” available. The docu-drama “An adventure in space and time”, written by Doctor Who writer and actor Mark Gatiss in 2013 to celebrate the

  • Comparison Of American Idol, The Office, And House Of Cards

    1989 Words  | 4 Pages

    American Idol, The Office, and House of Cards are three incredibly popular and well-regarded television series’ in the United States. All ran for several seasons, receiving critical acclaim at some point during their runs, and multiple Emmy awards to their names. Those three programs are examples of what modern reality tv, sitcoms, and dramas respectively aim to be. What same may not know is that all three have origins in the United Kingdom. American Idol began as Pop Idol a British ITV series that

  • Sport and the Media

    1058 Words  | 3 Pages

    growth of television as a significant cultural form during the 1960s put the relationship between sport and the media on the public agenda. In late 1969, the US magazine Sports Illustrated drew attention to the ways in which television was transforming sport. In effect, sport in the television age was a 'whole new game'. The growing economic and cultural significance of television for sport gradually became a pertinent issue in countries around the world.Clearly sport and television had developed

  • The Other Boleyn Girl

    1806 Words  | 4 Pages

    the life of Henry the VIIIth, before deciding to divorce Katherine of Aragorn, remarry Anne Boleyn and start the Church of England. The first adaptation is a television film, released by BBC in 2003, directed by Philippa Lowthorpe. It is remarkable for its innovative style, close to experimental, very unusual for the historical fictional drama genre. The film was shot with a digital camera, but what is most striking is the modern use of camerawork – handhelds, the shaky movements at the beginning,