Tv Ratings Essays

  • TV Ratings Benefit Viewers

    1990 Words  | 4 Pages

    What we and our children are watching on TV has become a concern to many. Some feel like there should be something to help decide what they think is appropriate and what is not. So in today's world TV ratings are a must. TV ratings might just be one of the best ways to control what is coming into our homes. With TV ratings we won't have to research every show that our children want to see. We only have to look in the corner of the TV to see what the program might contain, and then if we don't

  • Nielsen TV Ratings

    1277 Words  | 3 Pages

    The viewership data that Nielsen’s develops in important in determining how much advertisers pay to place their ads on TV. What are the advantages and disadvantages of the system? Are there alternative systems that might work better? Explain. Disadvantages of the System • It uses a very small target audience from various demographics to compile information using until recently manual forms and lately electronic meters. Both methods to record information are subject to mistakes and forgetfulness

  • Censorship Gone Too Far

    1679 Words  | 4 Pages

    Censorship Gone Too Far Seven Works Cited          Have you ever walked into a music store and seen those parental advisory stickers on most of todays' popular music? Or have you seen those TV ratings on the top left corner of your favorite shows? How about the ratings on your favorite video games? I'm sure you have, but do you really know what those so-called harmless stickers, and images do to the world of entertainment and your freedom of expression for that matter? A recent craze to

  • The Media and the Uneducated Masses

    905 Words  | 2 Pages

    interested in attracting their audiences.  As the years advanced and technology followed, media began taking different approaches to arouse the public.  Conflicts on television where seen as a more interesting and productive approach to increasing ratings.  After a while, interviewers would attempt to provoke debate, mud throwing and even emotion out of it's political guests.  Politicians who be allowed air-time to address questions presented by viewers and interviewers. One major complaint however

  • News Media, Money and Infotainment

    954 Words  | 2 Pages

    is known as "Infotainment". The media's goals are ratings based. They use shows like Jerry Springer, Entertainment Tonight, and Hard Copy to bring in these ratings. The media of today has grown into a profit-based industry that tries to entertain us with the news and with tabloid television shows. In the late 1980s and early 1990s the three big television stations, of ABC, CBS, and NBC, changed to provide more infotainment. Networks lost ratings to the heavy competition of cable and home video

  • rights fees in sport

    1516 Words  | 4 Pages

    march madness, the NFL or the Olympics. Rights fees are determined by the value a certain property holds, this is determined by the ratings. The most important ratings market world wide is undisputedly the North American, and in particular the US market as we will later discuss with the Olympic media coverage. With in the US it is a battle field to increase ratings because of the dollar value associated with the opportunity to sell advertising and consequently the rights fees. Personally I believe

  • Postman's Amusing Ourselves to Death

    1170 Words  | 3 Pages

    or Foe? Electronic media is inferior to print media due to the fact that electronic media can be bias, selective, and evasive for the purpose of entertainment. Electronic media serves as a form of entertainment with a main goal of serving their ratings rather than serving the people. It would seem that Postman would agree with this theory since he describes electronic media as a form of entertainment rather than a reliable source of information and facts in his book Amusing Ourselves to Death.

  • 27 Years Of Influential 60 Minutes

    1551 Words  | 4 Pages

    such a success. The hidden-camera interviews, the surprising of unsuspecting alleged crooks with a bombardment of questions, the longevity of the featured reporters, all of these are what made 60 Minutes a success--finishing in the top 10 Nielson ratings for 17 consecutive seasons and counting. Other than the fact that it changed from black-and-white to color with the new technology, the appearance of 60 Minutes has remained consistent. There is no reason to change a thing about such a prosperous

  • Entertainment And News

    744 Words  | 2 Pages

    Entertainment and News News coverage, whether by television, radio, the internet, or newspaper must be selective, selective not simply in which stories it reports but in how it presents them as well. The media is incapable of providing a rundown of everything that has transpired in a day. Therefore, editors, reporters, etc… decide what will go into the reports. Equally important, reporters are still human beings who, in spite their good intentions, occasionally succumb to anger, jealousy,

  • Netflix Inc.

    1391 Words  | 3 Pages

    recommendations for the subscriber. This system is based on customer rental history and the ratings the customers provide to Netflix. The ratings system is a simple 5 star system where 1 star is equal to a bad movie and 5 stars is equal to an excellent movie. Netflix also provides decision making information to the subscriber about each movie the company provides. This information includes the length, rating, cast and crew, special features, screen formats, and plot synopses. Netflix also provides

  • AIDS in the Movie Philadelphia

    1498 Words  | 3 Pages

    PHILADELPHIA Rated: PG-13 Release Date: 23-Dec-1993           DVD Date: 02-Nov-2004           HBS User Ratings Directed By:     Written By:           Cast:           1 review, 12 ratings Jonathan Demme     Ron Nyswaner                Tom Hanks Denzel Washington           Awesome     16.67% Antonio Banderas           Worth A Look     11.11% Our Reviewer Says:     Jason Robards                Just Average     16.67% "It's a touchy subject." - MP Bartley Joanne Woodward           Pretty Crappy     44

  • Media and Television - Analysis of the V-Chip

    2196 Words  | 5 Pages

    The V-Chip and TV Parental Guidelines During the last decade, media ratings have been used as a means of addressing concerns about "objectionable" or potentially harmful media content. Politicians, entertainment industry leaders, and parents alike have turned to media ratings as a "middle ground" to such concerns somewhere between direct government censorship and not addressing the issue at all. While movie ratings have been in place for several decades, there was a trend in adoption of

  • The Dumbing Down of American Fiction

    4710 Words  | 10 Pages

    American Fiction The 1976 film "Network" is an acerbic satire of television's single-minded obsession with mass ratings.One of the film's main characters, Howard Beale, is called the "Mad Prophet of the Airways," and his weekly harangues produce a "ratings motherlode"--yet he constantly admonishes his viewers to "Turn the damn tube off!"During one such rant Beale berates his audience as functional illiterates: "Less than three percent of you even read books!" he shouts messianically--and then promptly

  • The Emergence and Popularity of Reality TV

    2023 Words  | 5 Pages

    1. Introduction The emergence and soon popularity of reality TV in some degree demonstrates the huge market of selling “real experience” through exposing “realities” of privacy, relationship between players, etc. (Deery 2004 in TV program area.). However, reality TV may not be intrinsically “real” though almost all involved players are unprofessional actors and programs are usually highly inscribed. Players are actually selected carefully (e.g. audition or interviews) and constrained by various signed

  • Metaphors In The Vietnam War

    2551 Words  | 6 Pages

    Metaphors that Justify War Truth Uncloaked Do you think we had all the information that was at the President's disposal when he made the decision to deploy our troops in the Gulf? Do you think having that information might have made you feel more comfortable about our involvement? Should our government decide what we get to know and what we don't? By in large, we hear exactly what our government wants us to hear. Knowing this, at no other time paralleled in history, we want the truth;

  • Pornography Does Not Cause Rape

    2740 Words  | 6 Pages

    is that the mass media does not cause undesirable social behaviour and in actuality, the media people should not be dubbed as the "bad guys".  They simply use their power in the most constructive ways possible in order to promote their ratings and popularity.  One way to do that is to concentrate on what sells: sex, violence and disaster. Having said this, why is it then, that many in society still believe otherwise; why do they continue to believe that pornography is

  • Microsoft Vs. Government

    1466 Words  | 3 Pages

    because of the increased probability of price wars and more opportunity for critical innovation in the industry. Also, the eventual decision made by the government concerning the future of Microsoft will play a key role in future public approval ratings. Empirically speaking, the companies, an... ... middle of paper ... ... create an unhealthy, unbalanced market place for computer and computer software industry. The consequences are too dire to let Microsoft go on like it has in the past

  • School Uniforms Solving the Problem

    507 Words  | 2 Pages

    School Uniforms Solving the Problem Over the past couple of years, school uniform policies have been enforced as the most efficient method for “solving” problems such as crime and attendance ratings in our public schools. Many schools state that it is quite true that uniforms are lowering such mentioned rates of crime tremendously, but can this really be proven? Currently, there have only been informal studies that try to actually see if uniforms are helping, no long term studies. Technically

  • The Problem of Video Game Violence is Exaggerated

    1090 Words  | 3 Pages

    only) rating on the front of the videogame cover. This means that only players seventeen or older should be playing such games. However, many children around the ages of twelve and under are acquiring these video games as gifts or are purchasing the games themselves. Therefore, it can be assumed that the parents are purchasing M-rated games for their children, and that stores are willingly selling these young children M-rated games. As Paul Keegan says, parents are not following these ratings and stores

  • performance apraisal critique

    1548 Words  | 4 Pages

    of the performance rating. Outstanding is the highest rating. To get an outstanding rating means the employees contribution to the business far exceeds requirements. The employee is personally committed to the company’s mission, values and goals at a consistent level. The employee takes the initiative to identify challenging work goals and tries to find solutions. The employee’s quality is never a question, even under challenging situations. The next rating is an excellent rating. The employee who