download
view
online
TELEVISION QUARTERLY...... Volume XXXVI - Number 1
f
A Crumbling Firewall
By Bill Moyers, who says that the Corporation for Public Broadcasting is failing to protect PBS from political pressure.
Why All That On-Air Begging?
By Jan B. Jacobson. Interview with a veteran local public-TV station manager who notes that the CPB chairman compromised the system’s editorial integrity.
Backstage Secrets
By Greg Vitiello, who reveals how director Kirk Browning effects the magic of converting music to pictures for Live from Lincoln Center.
Boring!
By David Marc and Robert J. Thompson. How reality programs prospered, proliferated and are now turning off many viewers.
Fake News
By John V. Pavlik, a journalism school head who was interviewed on The Daily Show with Jon Stewart.
Television Hoaxes Ahead
By Kenneth Harwood, who notes that from Herodotus and H.G. Wells to reality TV, hoaxers have always captured large audiences.
Live TV Goes Awry
By Loring Mandel. What the writer learned from a Studio One disaster in 1957.
Ralph Kramden and The Honeymooners Turn the Big 5 0 (Sort of).
By Ron Simon, a broadcasting historian who notes that Jackie Gleason still represents a comic reflection of postwar urban America.
Bewitched: Rethinking a Sixties Sitcom Classic
By Cary O’Dell, a pop culture ruminator who takes issue with conventional feminist wisdom.
Forty Plus
By Martin Gostanian. Why the made-for-TV movie endures.

REVIEW AND COMMENT

Objection!: How High-Priced Attorneys, Celebrity Defendants and a 24/7 Media Have Highjacked Our Criminal Justice System
, by Nancy Grace with Diane Clehane
-Reviewed by Michael M. Epstein

Over the Edge: How the Pursuit and Youth by Marketers and the Media has Changed American Culture,
by Leo Bogart; Raising Consumers: Children and the American Mass Market in the Darly Twentieth Century, by Lisa Jacobson
-Reviewed by Nicholas Sammond

COMCASTed: How Ralph and Brian Roberts Took Over America’s TV, One Deal at a Time,
by Joseph N. DiStefano
-Reviewed by Paul Noble

South Park Conservatives, by Brian C. Anderson; Everything Bad Is Good For You,
by Steven Johnson
-Reviewed by Earl Pomerantz

What Women Watched: Daytime Television in the1950s,
by Marsha F. Cassidy
-Reviewed by Mary Ann Watson