TV Living: Television, Culture and Everyday LifeTV Living presents the findings of the BFI Audience Tracking Study in which 500 participants completed detailed questionnaire-diaries on their lives, their television watching, and the relationship between the two over a five year period. Gauntlett and Hill use this extensive data to explore some of the most fundamental questions in media and cultural studies, focusing on issues of gender, identity, the impact of new technologies, and life changes. Opening up new areas of debate, the study sheds new light on audiences and their responses to issues such as sex and violence on television. A unique study of contemporary tv audience behaviour and attitudes, TV Living offers a fascinating insight into the complex relationship between mass media and people's lives today. |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 45
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... radio programmes, he arranged for an announcement on the radio and in the Radio Times, the TV listings magazine published by the BBC, calling for volunteers for the study: 47,000 listeners offered their services. Throughout the second ...
... radio programmes, he arranged for an announcement on the radio and in the Radio Times, the TV listings magazine published by the BBC, calling for volunteers for the study: 47,000 listeners offered their services. Throughout the second ...
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... radio broadcasts provided a series of marker points in the day; housewives used the radio to alleviate stress and feelings of loneliness, and would often have it on in the background whilst they completed household chores. Hobson also ...
... radio broadcasts provided a series of marker points in the day; housewives used the radio to alleviate stress and feelings of loneliness, and would often have it on in the background whilst they completed household chores. Hobson also ...
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... radio in the household (98.8 per cent), and around 17 per cent had video cameras by 1996. Those who had telephone answering machines numbered 38 per cent, and nearly half of the sample had a personal computer in 1996 (48.7 per cent) ...
... radio in the household (98.8 per cent), and around 17 per cent had video cameras by 1996. Those who had telephone answering machines numbered 38 per cent, and nearly half of the sample had a personal computer in 1996 (48.7 per cent) ...
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... radio and watching television as primary activities. Scannell discusses the implications of this project: The overall implication to be drawn...is that the axes of difference both for daily activities and the proportion of time spent on ...
... radio and watching television as primary activities. Scannell discusses the implications of this project: The overall implication to be drawn...is that the axes of difference both for daily activities and the proportion of time spent on ...
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... radio is a close second. Wednesday (today) has been a typical day in my life. In the morning I went out and purchased my morning newspaper (Daily Mirror), read it over breakfast and did both crosswords. Then switched on TV, watched ...
... radio is a close second. Wednesday (today) has been a typical day in my life. In the morning I went out and purchased my morning newspaper (Daily Mirror), read it over breakfast and did both crosswords. Then switched on TV, watched ...
Contents
News consumption and everyday life | |
Transitions and change | |
Companionship guilt and social interaction | |
Video and technology in the home | |
The retired and elderly audiences | |
Gender and Television | |
Catering for men with sport and sex? | |
Gender issues in the household | |
Television violence and other controversies | |
Perceptions of violence | |
Bad language sex and nudity and issues of taste | |
Studying violence and taste | |
Conclusions | |
Further methodological details | |
What do men and women actually watch? | |
Should we still classify soap operas as womens Programmes? | |
Index | |
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63-year-old retired activities aged Audience Tracking Study bad language BBC1 BBC2 become broadcasters bulletins cent changes Channel Four chapter concerns consumption Coronation Street daily routine David Gauntlett daytime TV diaries diarists discussed drama Dunblane Dunblane massacre EastEnders elderly Emmerdale enjoy entertainment example favourite programmes feel guilty felt films friends gender guilty about watching household housewife husband important Independent Television Commission Inspector Morse issues James Bulger leisure lives means media violence men’s Morley Neighbours o’clock older parents particular patterns people’s period radio record relation relationship remote control respondents retired female retired male retired woman satellite schedules seen shows soap operas social sport talk taste teenagers teletext television and everyday television viewing things TV programmes usually viewers watching television watching TV Westminster Live whilst women women’s interests wrote X-Files young adults