Consistency of Tone Books and films maintain consistency of tone Consistency of Content TV presents Discontinuity Does the internet do the same? Ex. A.

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Consistency of Tone Books and films maintain consistency of tone Consistency of Content TV presents Discontinuity Does the internet do the same? Ex. A newscaster reports that we are on the brink of nuclear disaster and then they cut to a commercial from Burger King

Aesthetics=Dadaism Philosophy=Nihilism Psychology=Schizophrenia

Disinformation If the lies of a president could be dramatized like a film, then there would be outrage Lie = ContradictionContradiction Understanding a contradiction requires context Statements and events must be perceived as interrelated aspects of a continuous and coherent context

Blogs Attempting to fight disinformation and confusion with the blogs Each point made should be presented as a unified text Each paragraph should be connected to the last The content of the blog should be manageable and clear in the space provided

Debates Quick one-liners Talking Points Nothing too dry, intellectual, or contextual

Religion Art Music Icons Ritual

Entertainment Are all of these things entertaining? Is there another word? “Enchantment” By endowing these things with “magic” enchantment is the means through which we may gain access to sacredness Entertainment is the means by which we separate ourselves from it

Television (or any screen) Has a strong bias towards a psychology of secularism The power of a close-up face makes idolatry a hazard Brings personalities into our hearts and not abstractions into our heads Walter Cronkite plays better than the Milky Way and Jimmy Swaggart better than Jesus Attracts viewers by the millions (good thing?)

Hana Ardendt Page 122 Substitute the word Hamlet for religion and great religious traditions for great authors of the past There is no question that religion can become entertaining, but do we ruin it as an authentic cultural object when we make it so?

Television Commercial Assault on capitalism Originally an outgrowth of the Enlightenment Its principal theorists believed capitalism should be based on the idea that both buyer and seller are sufficiently mature, well informed, and reasonable to engage in transactions of mutual self interest

If a seller produces nothing of value, as determined by a rational market place, then the seller loses out The assumption of rationality among buyers that spurs competitors to become winners, and winners to keep winning

There is a law that makes sellers tell the truth about their products That law is destroyed when commercials come into play The discourse of “true” and “false” is discarded in commercials Empirical tests, logical analysis, and any elements of reason are impotent

Television commercials made linguistic discourse obsolete as the basis for product decisions Images are substituted for claims Pictorial commercials made emotional appeal not tests of truth, the basis of consumer decisions The distance between rationality and advertising wide

The truth of an advertisement’s claim is not an issue

The commercial insists on unprecedented brevity Disdains exposition Complex language is not to be trusted The argument is in bad taste and leads only to intolerable uncertainty

Politicians as part of the world of show business What if we didn’t know anything about the politicians except their policies, voting history etc. What do we know primarily about politicians?

What makes a better politician? Capable in negotiation? More imaginative in executive skill? More knowledgeable in international affairs? More understanding of the interrelations of economic systems?

The reason we almost always believe a politician is better is because of image A politician does not offer an image of himself A politician offers himself as an image of the audience Most powerful example of the TV commercial on political discourse The lesson of most TV commercials like “Reach out and Touch Someone” They provide a slogan, or a symbol or a focus that creates for viewers a comprehensive and compelling vision of themselves We are likely to vote for people whose personality, family life, and style, as imaged on screen, reflect our most positive images of ourselves Reach out and Touch Someone

Voter Interests Tangible Interests Patronage Preferential treatment Protection from Bureaucracy Support for one’s own union community Thanksgiving turkeys for indigent families Symbolic interests Image Charm Good looks Celebrity Personal disclosure

TV and (lack of) History “The past is a world, and not a void of grey haze” --Thomas Carlyle It is not just a world, but a living world It is the world of the present that is shadowy and difficult to understand The world of television is all about immediacy The quickness of information and TV communication removes contextual and historical content from politics

Huxleyan vs Orwellian Television does not ban books it displaces them With a limited ability to interpret, contextualize (historically and conceptually) we have way of protecting ourselves from corporate America