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11points!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! discuss how the Internet or television has impacted American culture or cultures around the world. You may choose to discuss positive or negative impacts please write in 2 paragraphs or one

User May Oakes
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Television and the internet have greatly impacted American culture in many different ways. Some of these impacts are positive; some are negative. With the advent of the television, families had the immediate availability of news, education, and entertainment at any time. As the video market grew over the years, so did the choices. Then the American public was introduced to the internet. It expanded the choices of what could be had with television even more, but now the public could communicate with each other instantaneously, all over the globe, mostly for free. The availability of this communication was a benefit to families, businesses, and individuals.

But with new technologies, there are always some downsides. The first generation of children who were brought up with television had more trouble with obesity than generations before because they did not play outside. This problem increased when the internet and video games came out. Television gave us access to live news. However, during the Vietnam war, one of the main reasons there was so little support for the war was that it was the first war that people could watch the horrors of war every night in their living rooms. The communication we have with the internet is very helpful, but adults use it regularly to trick young children to meet them. So, like with anything in life, these technologies bring benefits and deficits to modern American society.
User Blooze
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The ubiquity of television and telephones, and soon the internet, have contributed to the power of the media to influence consumers. Virtually every citizen in every developed country has access to a television and a cell phone. Pervasive access to television has led to the rise of 24-hour programming. When I was a child in the early 1960s in the United States, we had three network channels and PBS. Cable was not yet available in the rural are where I lived. My own children, who were born in the late 1980s, have had cable and satellite television access since birth. They have never known what it is like without cell phones. They interact with peers via cell phones, internet, and social media like Facebook. The media pervades every aspect of their lives.like 0dislike 0mwestwood | College Teacher | (Level 3) Distinguished EducatorPosted on December 23, 2009 at 3:18 PMThe most negative aspect of the media is that it controls what the public perceives and hears about. European and Asian exchange students in my area, for instance, often ask why Americans receive little or no real world news. There is a major network that has an evening program that is supposed to deal with world news, but little other than the mid-East is discussed. The magazine that is named for world news also gives only a select report on select parts of the world. Major newspapers in the United States are owned by certain people who control the slant of the news, again. One need only look at the treatment of presidents such as Richard Nixon whose conduct was throughout his life constantly under the miscroscope and compare it to the investigations on other congressmen and presidents who have had less than ethical careers themselves. One such example is the senator from and Eastern state who undoubtedly committed murder as a young man, yet he was lauded throughout the media after his death.The presidential elections are perfect examples of the bias of the media. In fact, Time magazine's editors even admitted to having influence the past election because of their front covers that presented one particular candidate a multitude of times. In another example of news bias, when citizens went to Washington to protest the proposed health care bill, it was reported to the public that a few thousand attended when later it was revealed that actually millions of citizens had gone.Photographs are good at creating bias, also. Depending upon the angle of the camera, a small group can seem like more people, or many people's picture can be cropped to appear smaller. So often, programs that are decidedly conservative invite prominent guests whose views are conservative, as do liberal programs. Frequently, people of one side or another watch programs that reinforce their beliefs so that they feel justified in what they believe. Regular television shows even affect people's ideas about human relationships, race relationships, and morality. "Sex and the City" and like shows condone behavior heretofore scorned in the America of earlier days.There are groups that work behind the scenes to expose these biases of the media. Judicial Watch is one such group that prints information withheld by mainstream media. Currently, they are working on an issue that may go before the Supreme Court before it is over.To read a University of Pennsyvania report on "The Effect of the News Media Environment on Citizen Knowledge of State Politics" see the site listed below.
User Tom Porat
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