The public broadcasting service is an American public broadcaster and television program distributor. Pbs.org is intended for parents and their children to learn about music, art, dance, and theatre. The broadcasting service was founded in 1970 by Hartford N. Gunn. Jr. The editors are often updating the site with new information for the parents and children to keep broadening their minds with new knowledge. The links in the page are very reliable and fully functioning.
The author of the broadcasting site is Katherine Lauderdale, sponsored by donations given by the community. Pbs.org staff can be contacted through mail in Arlington, VA. Pbs.org is an educational site were children may obtain new knowledge, all information put into the site
is referred by an educationalist and is correct. The main goal of this website is to teach/inform children about new ideas, as well as adults too.
...ry on television as an extension of radio that the TV program does not provide. One of the biggest differences is the side-by-side timeline of radio events and timeline of contemporary events. This definitely helps provide a frame of reference for when the events of radio were happening and how they may have been affected by current events. The site also provides a page of resources for additional information and a glossary of terms used in the timeline and film. The website also expands on the idea that sound attracts and that radio is not dead in today’s society.
In “Wires and Lights in a Box,” the author, Edward R. Murrow, is delivering a speech on October 15, 1958, to attendees of the Radio-Television News Directors Association. In his speech, Murrow addresses how it is his desire and duty to tell his audience what is happening to radio and television. Murrow talks about how television insulates people from the realities in the world, how the television industry is focused on profits rather than delivering the news to the public, and how television and radio can teach, illuminate, and inspire.
Public broadcasting was birthed, was to ensure that there is a medium where every voice had a platform. The goal was to ensure that citizens have access to information is essential in balancing the nation. Taras (2001) borrows a quote from Lowe and Juart (2005), who sate that public broadcasting “is to build social capital by “bridging” “bonding” and “witnessing”, but most of all by treating audience members as citizens rather than as consumers” (lowe & jauert, 2005).
Good morning, Sioux City. This is Adam Lewis and you are tuned to KL&R on this delightful March 3rd for all your news so you’ll know what’s going on.
“Constructing Canada: Do we need a public broadcaster to enhance democracy?” written by David Taras, a professor at the University of Calgary and director of Alberta Global Forum. Taras reinstates the turning point of Canada Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) and their relationship with the Canadian parliament. He addressed on the developments and struggles Public Service Broadcasters (PSB), specifically CBC, encounter in order to continue to telecast. Lastly, he explains that PSB has a major role in maintaining the balance of power between the government and the mass media. PSB were created by the public for the public because a democracy can only happen if everyone cooperates.
If PBS doesn’t do it, who will? Cable, yes, to a limited extent, but PBS will always reach a larger audience than an infinite number of cable networks with PBS-type programming. Without government support of the Corporation for Public Broadcasting and ultimately the Public Broadcasting Service itself, PBS would survive. Society, however, would suffer as the loss of one-fifth of the Service’s operating budget leads to cutbacks in programming and ultimately decreased positive external effects from the network. That’s why government intervention--an annual subsidy for PBS from the federal government--is so important: not because the network would disappear, but because it would fail to provide the socially optimal variety and quantity of programming.
U.S. News and World Report. “What TV Is Doing to America.” In Major Problems in American History Since 1945, edited by Robert Griffith and Paula Baker, 90-92. New York: Houghton Mifflin, 2007.
Moses, Annie M., and Benson McMullen. "What Television Can (And Can't) Do To Promote Early Literacy Development." YC: Young Children 64.2 (2009): 80-89. Education Research Complete. Web. 18 Apr. 2014.
PBS contends that the television series "is designed to encourage curiosity and to stimulate imagination" in young children: to help them learn. The creators of the program, which began in Britain, conducted research with children, nursery school teachers, and linguists. The co-creator and writer, Andrew Davenport, has a degree in Speech Sciences. "Teletubbies" makes use of bright colors, music, repetition, and a slow pace, because this is how young children learn, according to the current research on education. Michael Brunton, in an article in Time, said that "people are missing the point" when they criticize the repetition and hear the baby-talk of the teletubbies. "Teletubbies is in fact closely modeled around the latest theories of speech that identify patterns of movement, a sing-song voice,...repetition and social interaction as key building blocks." These views have been widely publicized, as has been the idea that young children learn the most, and most rapidly, before the age of three. PBS also...
An argument can be made that Journalism is one of the very few professions in the world of media that is handled with some sort of dignity and pride. After reading “The Elements of Journalism” by Bill Kovach and Tom Rosenstiel, I realized how important journalism is to each and every one of us. Whether you’re a writer or a reader, the back and forth exchange between provider and consumer is extremely important in pushing society forward. Journalism after all is designed to challenge society, promote new ideas and spark conversation between one another. Despite the positives of journalism, there are issues that exist within the profession that cannot be excused and cannot be ignored.
With the constant growth of sports media, there are more opportunities available in the field of sports broadcasting than ever before. It is widely believed that one must be a journalist or broadcaster to be involved in sports broadcasting or the broadcasting industry in general; however, this is not the case. In order to properly convey any type of broadcast, an entire team is required in order to create the best broadcast possible. In any case, this broadcasting team must be composed of a variety of people with very different levels of skills and different areas of expertise. "Broadcast journalism covers a wide variety of career options. If you prefer to work in front of the camera, local television or radio broadcasting is an option. It’s
Within this essay I will analyze how Radio and Television Broadcasting differs in approach within the UK and US. This essay will explain how the UK use Radio and Television Broadcasting as a Public Service opposed the US who dominate these services as a Private enterprise and will then determine which approach is better and why.
South Africa is currently an economic leader among the continent of Africa (second only to Nigeria in terms of GDP, yet South Africa has a much smaller population). However, within the worldwide context, South Africa has and continues to endure many issues socially, politically and economically. Because of these, the broadcast news system, comprising of television and radio, has endured an interesting and tumultuous past, and most importantly faces a fascinating future in terms their unique funding model. That being said, the models of both television and radio in South Africa leads one to question the effectiveness of the broadcast system in providing news and content that is fair, unbiased and most importantly critical in helping members of the community make informed decisions about their own country.
After visiting and examining the PBS Web site, I was able to conclude that it is an extremely successful entertainment and educational site. The Web site has won many substantial awards, including the prestigious "Webbie Award" in 1998 and 1999. According to a recent survey, fifty-six percent of users at the PBS Web site are male and sixty percent are between the ages of eighteen and forty-four. Forty-four percent of the Web site users have children and fifty-seven percent make online purchases. (Gallup/Plaw Release: Survey of 40,000 Internet Users. Fall 1998.)
As Americans we take pride in our liberating government. But, it is essential to ask how much we, the general public, know about our democracy. Because of the representative structure of our government, it is in our best interest to remain as knowledgeable as possible about political affairs so that we can play an active role in our democracy by voting for candidates and issues. The media, which includes print, television, and the internet, is our primary link to political events and issues. (For the purposes of this essay only print and television will be considered.) Therefore, in order to assess the success of our democracy it is necessary to assess the soundness of our media. We are lucky enough to have a media, in theory, free from government influences because of our rights to freedom of press and freedom of speech, but we are still subject to the media’s interpretation and presentation of politics, as is the danger when depending on any source for information. So, we must address how the media informs us; how successful it is at doing so; and how we should respond to it.