chosehumanity: (mitchell-george: idk bff)
chosehumanity ([personal profile] chosehumanity) wrote in [community profile] fandomhigh2010-08-11 09:28 am
Entry tags:

Teevee for Beginners, Wednesday

"Humanity has always tried to keep in contact," Mitchell started. He looked more cheerful, somehow, like something had relit the fire in his eyes that had gone out over the past few weeks, and especially the past weekend. In fact, he seemed downright cheerful, smiling more. "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."

Re: Sign In

[identity profile] elephantgadget.livejournal.com 2010-08-11 12:45 pm (UTC)(link)
Helen Haras-Uquara
vanillajello: (Run that by me again.)

Re: Sign In

[personal profile] vanillajello 2010-08-11 01:46 pm (UTC)(link)
Kate Gregson
awakestheghosts: (Reluctant Necromancer)

Re: Sign In

[personal profile] awakestheghosts 2010-08-11 01:48 pm (UTC)(link)
Chloe Saunders
awakestheghosts: (Being Watched)

Re: Talk to the TA

[personal profile] awakestheghosts 2010-08-11 01:48 pm (UTC)(link)
Chloe was here and doodling a bit on her notes.
vanillajello: (Sitting with arms crossed.)

Re: Listen to the Lecture

[personal profile] vanillajello 2010-08-11 02:00 pm (UTC)(link)
Kate was slouching in her seat, not really able to force herself to be interested in news of all things. Not this week.

And the assignment just made her make a face. Anything recent and newsworthy in her life was either too depressing, or too private for a setting like this.
vanillajello: (Idle talk.)

Re: Talk to the Teacher

[personal profile] vanillajello 2010-08-11 02:04 pm (UTC)(link)
"You look awfully happy."

That came out sounding almost like an accusation. And she'd said almost the same last week too, but... A lot could happen in a week.
vanillajello: (My lip does this thing.)

Re: Talk to the Teacher

[personal profile] vanillajello 2010-08-11 02:18 pm (UTC)(link)
Kate shrugged too. "Well, no one died," she replied dryly.
vanillajello: (Everything sucks.)

Re: Talk to the Teacher

[personal profile] vanillajello 2010-08-11 02:27 pm (UTC)(link)
Kate made a face. "Don't say that." Because she'd thought exactly the same thing.

Re: Sign In

[identity profile] rilla-myrilla.livejournal.com 2010-08-11 03:31 pm (UTC)(link)
Rilla Blythe

Re: Present Something Newsworthy

[identity profile] rilla-myrilla.livejournal.com 2010-08-11 03:39 pm (UTC)(link)
Rilla was not at her best with a lot of people staring at her: her tendency to lisp when nervous came back.

"There wath a thmall gathering of friendth on Thunday," oh, she loathed this, "evening in the common room," she said, trying to look professional even as her nerves betrayed. "And completely edible shortbread cookies were served. Even to the demon."

Rilla's experience with the news was fairly limited to the Glen St. Mary gossip column Notes in the newspaper.

Re: Sign In

[identity profile] inneedofcoffee.livejournal.com 2010-08-11 11:06 pm (UTC)(link)
Maladicta

Re: Sign In

[identity profile] she-sheds.livejournal.com 2010-08-12 12:34 am (UTC)(link)
Joolushko Tunai Fenta Hovalis
nohaircutsplz: ([comic] haughtier than you)

Re: Sign In

[personal profile] nohaircutsplz 2010-08-12 05:57 am (UTC)(link)
Medusalith Amaquelin
nohaircutsplz: (Default)

Re: Listen to the Lecture

[personal profile] nohaircutsplz 2010-08-12 06:00 am (UTC)(link)
The only thing Medusa could think of in her life recently that would count as 'newsworthy' was Blackagar's release from isolation, and she couldn't very well tell the humans about that, so she spent much of the class trying to come up with something else and drawing a blank.