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Media Research Mohammed Fareed Raffee #085 Mrs.Timm 12-D March 10, 2013. Introduction:. Living in a society of masks! The new Entertainment: Nothing beneficial. Corrupted views. What the people want, the people get! Kim Kardashian! Middle East impact. People want to walk in her shoes.
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Media ResearchMohammed FareedRaffee #085Mrs.Timm12-DMarch 10, 2013
Introduction: • Living in a society of masks! • The new Entertainment: • Nothing beneficial. • Corrupted views. • What the people want, the people get! • Kim Kardashian! • Middle East impact. • People want to walk in her shoes. • Entertainment: Fashion, Slang, and food.
What is really television? • TV: • Written language. • Printing press invention. • In the Us: • Rarely use it as a source of beneficial Information. • More on seeking pleasure or distraction • Modern Muslim Family Households. • Holy Month of Ramadan: • Distraction during fasting • Watching good Arabic series.
How TV takes up time? • Growth in leisure time. • Matched up to literacy and education. • Ready availability to printed matter. • Growth in use of mass media. • Reaching the climax • 4 hours of daily use (TV). • Coach potato • Very common now.
There is a wash in Media culture! • Politics are not important. • All in the past. • Lost it’s name in the world. • Concerns now: • With who did the president have sex. • Things he did or changed, not important! • Society sucked up in Media. • A Vacuum!
Reality news or fiction? • How we view reality? • Technology. • Still hard to find. • News has become important. • Most get from newspapers. • Little depend on TV.
Reality news or fiction? (Continued) • Media and good judgment: • Provides a sense or reality. • Adults now how to distinguish. • Most view TV news as fiction. • TV news is actually more creative.
Trashy Entertainment! • What young children now, and understand these days? • Prostitutes. • Young girls having sex. • Entertainment has gone out of control! • Corrupted daytime shows. • Any behavior is acceptable now. • Our Standards of moral views are lost. • Only shame derives us now.
Block over rated views! • V-chip? • Parental Blocking System. • Parents want a higher demand! • Some parents don’t even care. • Some are not even around. • Children exposed to trashy entertainment: • Apply them to society. • One big example: • MTV.
Shopping and Entertainment! • Do you have the look? • Celebrities. • Brands. • ShoeDazzle.com Inc. • Founded by Kim Kardashian. • Famous to the financial services. • Impact on: • Marketing • Branding • Potentially your own business!
Celebrities on the loose! • Kim Kardashian • 15 minutes of fame. • $65 million in one year. • Kanye west hits Liverpool. • Joined on Estelle for the smash hit. • American boy. • ‘Liverpool, We love you!’ • Hollywood hits International!
U.A.E is the Next big thing! • Why is it a growing economy? • High tourism rate. • More money has been loaded in. • What events are in the country? • The Grand prix. • Concert events. • Entertainment has risen it’s name by: • Nick Minaj • Snoop Dogg • Kanye West
Conclusion: • Printing press as TV: • More of leisure time. • News of the world become less important. • Entertainment out of control. • Any behavior is acceptable. • Kanye west and Kim Kardashian hit the top. • Point of View: • Society is just corrupted.
Work Cited • Baxter, Kevin. "Abu Dhabi's Plan to Steal the Show: Through Its State-Owned Events Organiser, Flash Entertainment, Abu Dhabi Is Using Its Annual Formula One Grand Prix at Yas Island to Position the UAE Capital as a Leading International Destination for Events." MEED Middle East Economic Digest 26 Nov. 2010: 23. Questia. Web. 9 Mar. 2013. • Bosshart, Louis, and Lea Hellmuller. "Pervasive Entertainment, Ubiquitous Entertainment." Communication Research Trends 28.2 (2009): 3+. Questia. Web. 9 Mar. 2013. • Brogan, Chris, and ShelK. Skrhak. "What Reality TV Stars Can Teach Us about Marketing and Branding: Conventional Wisdom Says the Most Precious 30 Seconds of Marketing Is Seeing Your Product Air during the Super Bowl. Today, Having Your Product Associated with a 24-Hour-a-Day Reality Star May Be Far More Valuable ... Especially If That Star Is You! Learn How to Become a Star in Your Own Reality." Success Feb. 2012: 44+. Questia. Web. 9 Mar. 2013. • "CALL THIS GOOD TV? in This Squalor Lived a Family in Desperate Need of Society's Help - Not a Film Crew to Turn Their Plight into Entertainment." Daily Mail (London) 23 June 2009: 17. Questia. Web. 9 Mar. 2013.
Work cited • Dyer, Richard. Only Entertainment. 2nd ed. New York: Routledge, 2002. Questia. Web. 9 Mar. 2013. • Friel, Patrick. "That's Entertainment." Afterimage 40.3 (2012): 38+. Questia. Web. 9 Mar. 2013. • Ibrahim, Muhammad F., and Ng C. Wee. "The Importance of Entertainment in the Shopping Center Experience: Evidence from Singapore." Journal of Real Estate Portfolio Management 8.3 (2002): 239+. Questia. Web. 9 Mar. 2013. • Miller, Sarah Bryan. "Guitar-Violin Team Duo Virtuosi Charms at Classical Guitar Society; ENTERTAINMENT." St Louis Post-Dispatch (MO) 28 Jan. 2013: A13. Questia. Web. 9 Mar. 2013.
Work Cited • Schlicke, Paul. Dickens and Popular Entertainment. London: Unwin Hyman, 1988. Questia. Web. 9 Mar. 2013. • Sposito, Sean. "To Spark a Spending Lift, AMEX Taps Fashion World." American Banker 16 May 2011: 9. Questia. Web. 9 Mar. 2013. • "Star City." Liverpool Echo (Liverpool, England) 6 Nov. 2008: 1. Questia. Web. 9 Mar. 2013. • Strom Berg, Peter G. Caught in Play: How Entertainment Works on You. Stanford, CA: Stanford UP, 2009. Questia. Web. 9 Mar. 2013.
Work cited • Tannenbaum, Percy H., ed. The Entertainment Functions of Television. Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, 1980. Questia. Web. 9 Mar. 2013. • "Trashy Entertainment Debases Us All." St Louis Post-Dispatch (MO) 24 Dec. 1995: 3B. Questia. Web. 9 Mar. 2013. • Valenti, F. Miguel. More Than a Movie: Ethics in Entertainment. Ed. Les Brown and Laurie Trotta. Boulder, CO: Westview, 2000. Questia. Web. 9 Mar. 2013.