Sponsor

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A01=Erik Barnouw
A01=Roscoe Pound
Adam Smith
Adams Chronicles
Advertising Agency Executives
Advertising Council
Atomic Industrial Forum
audience measurement
Author_Erik Barnouw
Author_Roscoe Pound
broadcast regulation
Carl Sandburg
Carnegie Commission
Category=KJSA
Category=KNTC
Charles Eames
CIO
commercial influence
Cooperative Broadcasting
cultural impact television
Educational Broadcasters
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Ether Advertising
Federal Radio Commission
Forsyte Saga
Ipana Troubadours
John Kenneth Galbraith
John W. Gardner
mass communication theory
media studies
Na Tennyson
National Broadcasting Company
NBC
Network Documentary
Paul Goodman
Philco Television Playhouse
Public Television
Sponsor's Booth
Sponsor’s Booth
Stomach Settlers
television sponsorship effects
Toll Broadcasting
United States Entered World War
Unwelcome Answer
War Advertising Council
Washington Radio Conference
York City Station

Product details

  • ISBN 9780765805478
  • Weight: 340g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Nov 2003
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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The television sponsor has become semi-mythical. He is remote and unseen, but omnipresent. Dramas, football games, and press conferences pause for a "word" from him. He "makes possible" concerts and public affairs broadcasts. His "underwriting grants" brings the viewer music festivals and classic films. Interviews with visiting statesmen are interrupted for him, to continue "in a moment."

Sponsorship is basic to American television. Even noncommercial television looks to it for survival. A vast industry has grown up around the needs and wishes of sponsors. Television's program formulas, business practices, and ratings have all evolved in ways to satisfy sponsor requirements. Indeed, he has become a potentate of our time.

The Sponsor is divided into three parts. In "Rise," Barnouw sketches the rise of the sponsor, in both radio and television, to his present state of eminence. In "Domain," the sponsor's pervasive impact on television programming is examined, with an emphasis on network television, the primary arena of the industry. And in "Prospect," Barnouw assesses what such dominance has meant for American society, mores, and institutions--and what it may mean for our future. This is a gripping volume about power, how it not only influences programming itself, but how it defines for the average person what is good, great, and desirable.

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