chosehumanity (
chosehumanity) wrote in
fandomhigh2009-06-12 12:24 pm
Entry tags:
TeeVee for Beginners, Friday Period Two
"Humanity has always tried to keep in contact," Mitchell started. He wasn't going to say anything about last week, mostly because he was very happy to be far away from last week. "At least within the tribe. Sharing stories isn't really about fiction, it's about sharing a world, about finding a connection. And there's very little that connects us more than the events that go on all around us."
He was back in the classroom with the couches, but he'd kept the bigger flatscreen TV for this one. "Newspapers started around the 19th century," he said, "In the early 20th century, radio absorbed that task. And as with most things that happen on the radio, eventually, it winds up on TV, although it loaned elements of film newsreels as well. While all the other formats were still barely a blink in a broadcaster's eye, TV news rose up in the late 1940s and became an essential part of the media as we know it. You saw CNN last week: that's the result of sixty years of broadcast news."
"But let's go back in time a bit," he said, gesturing at the TV. "1953. Queen Elizabeth the Second was coronated. It was broadcast by the BBC and meant a breakthrough for news on television: over twenty million people tuned in to watch her Majesty receive her crown. There had never been that many viewers of one program in the UK before. A record amount of TV sets was sold that month, and now the British, too, longed for a regular newscast. It wouldn't be until 1954 until the British had news, but by then the BBC had already acquired a reputation that would last them for decades."
"It took them a time to tussle about the format. You can essentially break the history of TV news down to a couple of blocks of inventions and changes. It's sufficient to say that there was a lot of experimenting in the early days; today, everything is much more streamlined. News is widespread now - the dangers lie in who's controlling it, in the spin of it. What they don't say can mean more than what they do, the items they decide to run and those they don't."
He smiled at the class. "I want you all to present something newsworthy out of your life," he said, "Like a news broadcast. And then I want the rest of you lot to discuss what their spin is."
[[ and ocd is up! ETA: so I fubar'ed on the first link in the Teevee section; it can actually be found here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aGLN1kREJ2Q Ahem. ]]
He was back in the classroom with the couches, but he'd kept the bigger flatscreen TV for this one. "Newspapers started around the 19th century," he said, "In the early 20th century, radio absorbed that task. And as with most things that happen on the radio, eventually, it winds up on TV, although it loaned elements of film newsreels as well. While all the other formats were still barely a blink in a broadcaster's eye, TV news rose up in the late 1940s and became an essential part of the media as we know it. You saw CNN last week: that's the result of sixty years of broadcast news."
"But let's go back in time a bit," he said, gesturing at the TV. "1953. Queen Elizabeth the Second was coronated. It was broadcast by the BBC and meant a breakthrough for news on television: over twenty million people tuned in to watch her Majesty receive her crown. There had never been that many viewers of one program in the UK before. A record amount of TV sets was sold that month, and now the British, too, longed for a regular newscast. It wouldn't be until 1954 until the British had news, but by then the BBC had already acquired a reputation that would last them for decades."
"It took them a time to tussle about the format. You can essentially break the history of TV news down to a couple of blocks of inventions and changes. It's sufficient to say that there was a lot of experimenting in the early days; today, everything is much more streamlined. News is widespread now - the dangers lie in who's controlling it, in the spin of it. What they don't say can mean more than what they do, the items they decide to run and those they don't."
He smiled at the class. "I want you all to present something newsworthy out of your life," he said, "Like a news broadcast. And then I want the rest of you lot to discuss what their spin is."
[[ and ocd is up! ETA: so I fubar'ed on the first link in the Teevee section; it can actually be found here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aGLN1kREJ2Q Ahem. ]]

Re: Present Something Newsworthy
"Zack Fair, a small-town boy from Gongaga turned elite ShinRa SOLDIER has been busy making a place for himself on Fandom Island. He had been sent here to upgrade his education, but hasn't yet turned down any opportunity to do his SOLDIER duty in his quest to become a hero. Perhaps most notable among his efforts would be his role in the recent mutant-alligator invasion, where he assisted Prince Arthur Pendragon in concentrating the attacks in the park before he set off into the sewers with a small group of fighters in order to take the battle to the monsters' home turf.
"These exploits," Zack was terribly proud of himself for being able to sneak in a word like 'exploits,' "earned him a promotion in the ranks of the local reserve, where he now serves alongside Arthur Pendragon and Leto Atreides, organizing troops to keep our home on Fandom Island safe. Congratulations, Zack, and we hope to see you continue this streak in the future."
And grin. And nod. That would do!
Re: Present Something Newsworthy
Re: Present Something Newsworthy
Really, it wasn't hard to please Zack, though.