A chronological account of the development of prime-time television from its beginnings as a medium of entertainment to the present day.
Introduction The Heritage of Radio Programming (1927-1947) The Experimental Days of Television Programming (1939-1947) Finding an Audience (1948-1952) The Rise and Fall of Live Drama and Quiz Shows (1953-1959) Detectives, Cowboys, and Happy Families (1960-1969) Controversy in Prime Time (1970-1984) Changes in Competition (1996-2005) Conclusion Abbreviations Bibliography
Barbara Moore is Professor in the College of Communiacations, University of Tennessee. She co-authored the textbook Radio, TV, and Cable Programming (Iowa State University Press, 1994) Marvin R. Bensman is Professor at the University of Memphis, a member of the board of the Broadcast Education Association, and the author of The Beginning of Broadcast Regulation in the 20th Century (MacFarland, 2000). Jim van Dyke teaches at Marian College in Milwaukee, and has published television criticism in various journals.
Barbara Moore, Marvin R. Bensman, and Jim Van Dyke have cobbled
together a compendium of thoroughly researched evidence that
America's top medium for news and information got to be No. 1 for
prime-time reasons. The programs, the regulations and the history
of television, accompanied by a generous collection of photographs,
combine for an interesting addition to the shelves of TV buffs
anywhere.
*American Journalism*
Organized chronologically, this text examines trends in the prime-
time programming of the broadcast networks from its roots in 1920s
radio to present day offerings. Writing as both academics and fans,
Moore and co-authors discuss all of the major technical, aesthetic,
and cultural developments in the medium. Sidebars cover such topics
as the quiz show scandals and the introduction of the three-camera
filmed sitcom.
*Reference & Research Book News*
[P]rovides a complete and accessible understanding of the media
medium of television through the historical and modern study of
sitcoms, dramas, and other prime-time television particulars.
Delving deep into the intricacies of American popular culture and
the influential role played by many television shows, Prime-Time
Television features a scholarly analysis of the shows, producers,
genres, trends, and ideals behind various influential television
productions. A seminal contribution to university level Popular
Culture reference collections, Prime-Time Television is very
strongly recommended reading.
*MBR Internet Bookwatch*
Well-written and clearly and intelligently laid out, this book's
greatest strength for high-school researchers is the historically
grounded contrasting of radio with television for students unaware
of the similarities between the two. This work best serves those
concerned with the macro-level of broadcast entertainment, rather
than the micro-level of details about specific programs.
*School Library Journal*
Ask a Question About this Product More... |