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The Unreality Industry:

The Deliberate Manufacturing of Falsehood and what it is Doing to Our Lives
Front Cover
4 Reviews
Oxford University Press, 1993 - Performing Arts - 218 pages
The claims made for television when it was a fledgling industry in the early 1950s have virtually all proven false. TV was to be the great entertainer-educator, an electronic marvel that could reach into the lives of millions and, over time, elevate their tastes and sensibilities. As we now know, of course, the entertainment component of this equation has so thoroughly dominated every aspect of TV and the mass media that most everything has been reduced to simple, slick, and powerful images. As Fred Friendly once remarked, "commercial television makes so much money doing its worst, it can't afford to do its best."
This is the state of things in America on the eve of the twenty-first century. And as Ian I. Mitroff and Warren Bennis show in this fascinating and profoundly disturbing book, the situation only promises to get worse. Already, newspapers and magazines such as USA Today and Business Week have adopted a sort of television look, helping to blur the line between reality and fantasy that the authors believe is a frightening hallmark of contemporary life. Surveys show that up to 50% of those who watch crime re-enactment programs such as "Rescue 911" believe they are witnessing "the real thing." And consider, for example, the prospect of "virtual reality," where people can place themselves "inside" TV; in the not so distant future, the authors suggest, consenting adults will be able to slip into undergarments lined with sensors and miniature actuators and, while whispering endearments, enjoy "sex" over the phone. What becomes clear as we read The Unreality Industry is that the deliberate creation of unreality is one of the most pivotal social forces shaping our time.
Mitroff and Bennis explore in detail the pervasive and dangerous effects of television on American culture, arguing that we have fallen victim to the invented unrealities passed on through the mass media. Focusing on TV as the major culprit of a problem that threatens to spiral out of control, they point to specific issues such as the selection of political candidates, celebrity worship, and the choice by political and business leaders to offer the public pleasing visual images rather than real solutions to a variety of economic and social problems. The authors present a number of suggestions for corrective action, among them an impassioned plea for the uncommercialization of the television news, programs which continue to resemble more and more the satirical "game show" version of the news in the movie Network.
The only book to address what is perhaps the most pressing social issue of our time, The Unreality Industry should be required reading for anyone concerned with the extent to which the "American Dream" has become just that.
  

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Review: The Unreality Industry: The Deliberate Manufacturing of Falsehood and What It Is Doing to Our Lives

User Review  - Tom Darrow - Goodreads

Good topic, but too much repetition and superficial coverage of themes. If you want to get the gist of the book, read the chapter on hero-making and skip the rest. Read full review

Review: The Unreality Industry: The Deliberate Manufacturing of Falsehood and What It Is Doing to Our Lives

User Review  - Michelle - Goodreads

Criticizes the news and celebrity gossip and general ways information is distributed. Interesting, but some theories and accusations seem far-fetched to me. Quotes: "It is easy to raise money for the ... Read full review

Related books

Contents

The Entertainment Society
1
An introduction to the whole concept
22
Unrealitys Primary
44
The Prosthetic Society
71
The industrialized Perfection of Rottenness
90
Historical Roots
123
Epilogue
196
Index
213
Copyright

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References from web pages

Mitroff, Bennis - The Unreality Industry - conspiracyresearch.org
The Unreality Industry: The Deliberate Manufacturing of Falsehood and What It Is Doing to Our Lives A "collision course with reality" caused by our ...
www.conspiracyresearch.org/ forums/ index.php?showtopic=42646& mode=linear

The Unreality Industry: The Deliberate Manufacturing of Falsehood ...
MITROFF, IAN I., AND BENNIS, WARREN The Unreality Industry: The Deliberate Manufacturing of Falsehood and What It Is Doing to Our Lives ...
www.antiqbook.com/ boox/ lef/ 031041.shtml

theocentric: Images and Words
[1] Ian I. Mitroff and Warren Bennis, The Unreality Industry: The Deliberate Manufacturing of Falsehood and What It Is Doing to Our Lives (New York: Oxford ...
www.theocentric.com/ theology/ method/ images_and_words.html

Communication Research and the "Rhetorical Environment"
The unreality industry (The deliberate manufacturing of falsehood and what it is doing to our lives). New York: Oxford University Press. ...
www.questia.com/ PM.qst?a=o& se=gglsc& d=5001897339

GRADUATE RESEARCH CENTRE IN CULTURE AND COMMUNICATION
Mitroff, Ian and Bennis, Warren (1989) The Unreality Industry: The deliberate manufacturing of falsehood and what it is doing to our lives, New York, ...
www.sussex.ac.uk/ gchums/ documents/ promcult07.doc

About the author (1993)


Ian I. Mitroff is Harold Quinton Distinguished Professor of Business Policy and Director for the Center for Crisis Management of the Graduate School of Business at the University of Southern California.
Warren Bennis is Distinguished Professor of Business Policy at the University of Southern California.

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