Television series by CBS Paramount Television Essays

  • Hiring In-Laws: A Bad Idea

    1373 Words  | 3 Pages

    Hiring In-Laws: A Bad Idea Many successful small businesses have been ruined by bringing in-laws in to the family business. As these in-laws struggle to establish a voice in the company, meaning well, they often wind up destroying them. As the owner of the family business, it is your job to avoid situations that could hurt or hinder your business. In this case you should assume a few often overlooked points:  When approaching your business, never think of it in terms of one happy family. 

  • Viacom

    1072 Words  | 3 Pages

    Viacom formed when FCC rules had forced CBS to spin off some of its cable TV and program operations, this happened in 1971. Viacom then buys WAST-TV in 1979, in 1985 Blockbuster Video is founded, in 1981 the NAI buys majority interest ( Sumner Redstone owns this), in 1994 Viacom announces multi-transponder, multi-satellite agreement with PanAmSat. Also in 1994 Viacom and Paramount announces 8.4 billion dollar merger, Viacom then sells its 33% share of Lifetime. In 1995 Viacom spins off its cable

  • Historical, Social, And Political Events Of The 1960's

    664 Words  | 2 Pages

    1960s was a very eventful decade. Americans enjoyed popular shows, including “Leave It to Beaver,” comedians such as The Smothers Brothers, and a well-known news anchor named Walter Cronkite. There were many ways that events of the decade and the television industry affected each other. 1960s Historical, Social, and Political Events Many important historical and political events took place in the 60s. In 1960, the first televised presidential debate was aired on national TV between John F. Kennedy

  • The Structure of American Film Industry

    2253 Words  | 5 Pages

    Outline the main changes the paramount decree effected on the structure of the American film industry and discuss the measures the ex-studios took to remain in control of the film market. The period of the 1920’s to 1950’s where known as the studio era in Hollywood. A few major companies monopolized the industry through vertical integration when the film companies controlled all production distribution and exhibition. The majors determined which movies were shown in which theatres, choosing their

  • Blacks on Television: Amos & Andy

    2267 Words  | 5 Pages

    African Americans on television is frequently a controversial topic. Throughout its rather brief history, television, in its programming, has skewed predominantly white, (Pringozy, 2007). This was clearer in the 1950s and early 1960s, and it even remained true throughout the 1970s, when television shows with mainly all African American casts became hits, (Strausbaugh, 2006). The success of The Cosby Show in the 1980s helped to improve race relations somewhat, or at least on television, (McNeil, 1996)

  • The Walt Disney Company: The Art Of Brand Building Keeps Disney Center Stage

    1669 Words  | 4 Pages

    first animated feature film was Snow White in 1937, followed by Fantasia and Pinocchio in the 1940s. Disneyland, the theme park developed largely by Walt, opened in 1955 in Anaheim, California. The television series, the Mickey Mouse Club, was produced from 1955 to 1959, and the Disney weekly television series (under different names, including The Wonderful World of Disney) ran for 29 straight years. (1) Walt Disney died in 1966 of lung cancer. Disney World in Orlando, Florida, opened in 1971, the same

  • The CIA In Hollywood, By Tricia Jenkins

    597 Words  | 2 Pages

    In the book, The CIA in Hollywood, by Tricia Jenkins, Jenkins explains a brief and clear demonstration on how the CIA has heavily sought to team up with Hollywood to develop certain plans since the 1990s. Jenkins’ intent is to inform the ‘largely hidden history of the CIA in Hollywood’ and to specify how ‘this model of secret influence’ functions (53). Jenkins covers CIA portrayal and involvement, from the Cold War, when it was mostly ‘depicted in a very negative light,’ (133) to the current 9/11

  • Media Control

    1373 Words  | 3 Pages

    after the September 11th attacks. Soon after the attacks, the cover model of Vogue appeared on the November issue wearing an American flag T-shirt, and a page of the magazine was dedicated to advertising the new style of “chic, patriotic” clothing. Television commercials as well have taken a turn towards patriotism, some in very subtle ways. It seems that many ads now emphasize families, comfort, sentimentality, and security, things that are desired by many U.S. citizens after the attacks. Through indirect

  • Essay On Frank Sinatra

    1016 Words  | 3 Pages

    debut at the Desert Inn, and became a prominent figure on the Las Vegas scene throughout the 1950s and 1960s. After his fame began to rise he was open to creating a second season of The Frank Sinatra Show that began on CBS Television. Sinatra did not find the success on television for which he had hoped. He presented himself in an unwelcoming manner to the TV audience, which was not easily welcoming into homes. He projected arrogance not compatible with the type of cozy congeniality that played well

  • U.S. Court of Appeals 9th Circuit

    7825 Words  | 16 Pages

    v. No. 96-55243 HOST INTERNATIONAL, INC., a Delaware corporation, D.C. No. Defendant-Appellee, CV-93-00142-R and ORDER PARAMOUNT PICTURES, CORPORATION, a Delaware corporation, Defendant-Intervenor. Filed December 28, 1999 Before: Betty B. Fletcher and Stephen S. Trott, Circuit Judges, and Bruce S. Jenkins,1 District Judge. Order; Dissent by Judge Kozinski

  • The American Film Industry

    3348 Words  | 7 Pages

    special effects, and overall satisfaction within a 2 hour period of time. Movies can also take you to a physical state that theatre can not. They take you to real physical locations instead of just a cardboard stages. It's the same reason people like television so much. The birth of cinema came in the late 1800s. One of the major reasons for the emergence of motion pictures in the 1890s was the late 1880s development of a camera that could capture movement, and a sprocket system that could move the

  • Actors and Actresses of the 50s: Vivien Leigh, Audrey Hepburn, Marlon Brando, Grace Kelly, Bette Davis, Katharine Hepburn, Burt Lancaster, Bing Crosb

    1546 Words  | 4 Pages

    was, if not starring in, assuming major responsibilities for the success of motion pictures she appeared in. Then with major roles onscreen, came worldwide attention off-screen, most notably due to a succession of famous and/or rich husbands and a series of health crises throughout her life. To put it simply, Elizabeth Taylor has lived a life far more exciting and dramatic than any movie she's ever appeared in and probably most any other movie you could name. She's known internationally for her beauty

  • Princess Diana and Voyeurism

    2242 Words  | 5 Pages

    recorded the scene for both posterity and prosperity, got by with a slap on the wrist, if that. The car crash that killed Princess Diana and her companion Dodi Al-Fayed early Sunday, apparently as paparazzi trailed the couple in Paris, follows a series of run-ins between celebrities and those who take their pictures for big money. Witnesses said news photographers, probably freelance paparazzi, were pursuing the couple on motorcycles. A witness told CNN that paparazzi were taking pictures of the