The History of Prime Time Television (Paperback, Revised First Edition)


"The History of Prime Time Television" is a user-friendly textbook that chronicles television's unique history from the drawing board to the living room, and beyond. Organized chronologically, the book begins by briefly addressing the age of invention and the birth of radio. However, the primary focus of the text surrounds prime time programming, homing in on the series that defined their respective decade by reflecting changes in the culture, style and values of the time, and how some went on to become iconic representations of 20th and 21st century America.
Each decade's historical importance, as well as all of the nuance and chronological markers connected to the story of television itself, is covered in a way that engages students and helps them retain what they are learning. Discussion questions geared to tap into the students critical thinking follow every chapter. Topics include:
Invention and Promotion Television s Early StrugglesHow Serious Programming began with ComedyThe Role of Television During WartimePrime Time Television's Golden AgeCivil Rights and TelevisionLong-Form TelevisionTelevision s Symbiotic Relationship to SportsThe Birth and Growth of Cable ProgrammingReality Programming
Students will also glean information about the impact of each decade s culture on television and learn about the transition from black and white to color programming, deregulation, censorship, and the future of television in the new millennium.
"The History of Prime Time Television" includes fascinating information about the historical milestones that made television not just a form of entertainment, but a social mediator, a political force, and American's window into the human experience and condition. The book is ideal for courses in the areas of media history, entertainment history, and media communications.
George Lee Marshall earned his Bachelor of Arts Degree from San Diego State University. Working for the government after college, he went on to make educational and training films for the United States Navy. In 1983, he began writing for both television and feature films, selling over 50 screenplays, treatments, long-form teleplays, television episodes and pilots over the next twenty-five years, earning him lifetime member status in the Writers Guild of America. In 2000, he was asked by San Diego State University to develop and teach writing courses for their School of Theater, Television and Film. There, over the past 13 years, Lee has introduced curriculum and created courses for upper-division and graduate-level classes, including The History of Prime Time Television. Professor Marshall has worked with the Veteran's Administration at California State University, Long Beach to create and teach a 15-week real-time online storytelling course for returning veterans, while being twice recognized at SDSU as his department s Outstanding Faculty. Professor Marshall currently lectures at the nationally acclaimed Dodge College of Film and Media Arts on the Chapman University Campus teaching TV history, business, and writing courses.

R2,315

Or split into 4x interest-free payments of 25% on orders over R50
Learn more

Discovery Miles23150
Mobicred@R217pm x 12* Mobicred Info
Free Delivery
Delivery AdviceOut of stock

Toggle WishListAdd to wish list
Review this Item

Product Description

"The History of Prime Time Television" is a user-friendly textbook that chronicles television's unique history from the drawing board to the living room, and beyond. Organized chronologically, the book begins by briefly addressing the age of invention and the birth of radio. However, the primary focus of the text surrounds prime time programming, homing in on the series that defined their respective decade by reflecting changes in the culture, style and values of the time, and how some went on to become iconic representations of 20th and 21st century America.
Each decade's historical importance, as well as all of the nuance and chronological markers connected to the story of television itself, is covered in a way that engages students and helps them retain what they are learning. Discussion questions geared to tap into the students critical thinking follow every chapter. Topics include:
Invention and Promotion Television s Early StrugglesHow Serious Programming began with ComedyThe Role of Television During WartimePrime Time Television's Golden AgeCivil Rights and TelevisionLong-Form TelevisionTelevision s Symbiotic Relationship to SportsThe Birth and Growth of Cable ProgrammingReality Programming
Students will also glean information about the impact of each decade s culture on television and learn about the transition from black and white to color programming, deregulation, censorship, and the future of television in the new millennium.
"The History of Prime Time Television" includes fascinating information about the historical milestones that made television not just a form of entertainment, but a social mediator, a political force, and American's window into the human experience and condition. The book is ideal for courses in the areas of media history, entertainment history, and media communications.
George Lee Marshall earned his Bachelor of Arts Degree from San Diego State University. Working for the government after college, he went on to make educational and training films for the United States Navy. In 1983, he began writing for both television and feature films, selling over 50 screenplays, treatments, long-form teleplays, television episodes and pilots over the next twenty-five years, earning him lifetime member status in the Writers Guild of America. In 2000, he was asked by San Diego State University to develop and teach writing courses for their School of Theater, Television and Film. There, over the past 13 years, Lee has introduced curriculum and created courses for upper-division and graduate-level classes, including The History of Prime Time Television. Professor Marshall has worked with the Veteran's Administration at California State University, Long Beach to create and teach a 15-week real-time online storytelling course for returning veterans, while being twice recognized at SDSU as his department s Outstanding Faculty. Professor Marshall currently lectures at the nationally acclaimed Dodge College of Film and Media Arts on the Chapman University Campus teaching TV history, business, and writing courses.

Customer Reviews

No reviews or ratings yet - be the first to create one!

Product Details

General

Imprint

Cognella

Country of origin

United States

Release date

July 2013

Availability

Supplier out of stock. If you add this item to your wish list we will let you know when it becomes available.

First published

July 2013

Authors

Dimensions

229 x 152 x 23mm (L x W x T)

Format

Paperback

Pages

448

Edition

Revised First Edition

ISBN-13

978-1-62661-208-2

Barcode

9781626612082

Categories

LSN

1-62661-208-0



Trending On Loot