Television

  • Television: The Limits of Deregulation
    By Lori A. Brainard

    Prentice Hall , 1989 . Reagan , Ronald . Veto - S . 742 : Message from the President of the United States of America Returning Without My Approval S. 742 , the Fairness in Broadcasting Act . Washington , D.C .

  • Television: Visual Storytelling and Screen Culture
    By Jeremy G. Butler

    (Boston: Pearson Education, 2008) provides practical instruction on creating news stories. Short summaries of the evolution and the structure of television news can be found in Raymond Carroll, “Television News,” in TV Genres: A ...

  • Television
    By Catherine Chambers

    5 ; Pearson Television , pp . 4 , 23 , 24 , 26 , 32 ; Polygram / The Kobal Collection , p . 12 ; Science Photo Library Vaughan Fleming , p . 41 ; Sony , p . 31 ; Stay Still / Caroline Mardon , p . 28 ; The Stock Market / Tom Stewart ...

  • Television
    By Amy Hackney Blackwell

    This was the year of the infamous Janet Jackson “wardrobe malfunction” that occurred during the halftime show of the Super Bowl; singer Justin Timberlake ripped open Jackson's top, exposing her right breast and raising the ire of ...

  • Television
    By Karen Brennan

    Television

  • Television
    By Janet Riehecky

    An illustrated history of television, from its precursors such as telegraph and radio to its impact on society and projections for its future.

  • Television
    By Robyn Gee, Christopher Griffin-Beale, Inglis

    Looks at how TV programs are recorded and broadcast, discusses special effects, explains how TV sets work, and considers video games and home computers.

  • Television: A Biography
    By David Thomson

    David Thomson surveying a Boschian landscape, illuminated by that singular glow—always “on”—and peopled by everyone from Donna Reed to Dennis Potter, will be the first complete history of the defining medium of our time.

  • Television: The Director's Viewpoint
    By John W. Ravage, Jack Ravage

    Essentially, we treat each program segment as a play, and each play on its own merit—what it's about and what the objectives are with each one. I wouldn't want to do Starsky and Hutch; I don't want to do Baretta or Kojak.

  • Television
    By Phil Emms

    Television

  • Television
    By Michael Teitelbaum

    But today's television is very different from the TV our grandparents knew. Using a product that kids are familiar with, Television, this book introduces kids to the concept of innovation and its impact on their everyday life.

  • Television: The Small Box That Changed the World
    By Katie Kawa

    Television became the main source for the latest information on current events, and it allowed people to watch those events unfold—sometimes in real time. For example, the man who was accused of shooting Kennedy, Lee Harvey Oswald, ...

  • Televisión: tecnología de los receptores del sistema PAL color
    By Francisco Ruiz Vassallo

    Televisión: tecnología de los receptores del sistema PAL color

  • Televisión: tecnología de los magnetoscopios del sistema VHS
    By Francisco Ruiz Vassallo

    Televisión: tecnología de los magnetoscopios del sistema VHS

  • Television: Innovation, Disruption, and the World's Most Powerful Medium
    By Seth Shapiro

    He is an Adjunct Professor at the USC School of Cinematic Arts, a Governor of the Television Academy, and Principal of New Amsterdam Media LLC. "If you ever wanted to know how the television industry began, this is your primer.

  • Television: Technology and Cultural Form
    By Raymond Williams

    Television: Technology and Cultural Form was first published in 1974, long before the dawn of multi-channel TV, or the reality and celebrity shows that now pack the schedules.

  • Television: The First Fifty Years
    By Jeff Greenfield

    Records, in photographs and text, television's fifty-year history, examining the people and programs which have transformed popular entertainment into a multi-billion-dollar industry which both reflects and shapes contemporary life

  • Television: Technology and Cultural Form
    By Raymond Williams

    From the often-named 'founding father' of TV studies, this is the much-anticipated third edition of a text, first published in 1974, that has become known as the founding text for television studies.

  • Television: Critical Methods and Applications
    By Jeremy G. Butler

    SciFi, 285 Scopitone, 223 Scott, Ridley, 301 Scream, 237 Screen direction, 149–151, 160 Screen time, 160 Screenplay, 145 Se7en, 229 See How They Run, 21 Sega Sports NFL 2K1, 276 Segmentation, 9, 10 Segue, 180 Seinfeld, 164, 189, ...

  • Television: The Small Box That Changed the World
    By Katie Kawa

    Readers find the answers as they trace the history of television, from its invention to the current age of "Peak TV." This fascinating story is presented to readers through informative main text, annotated quotations, detailed sidebars, ...