The Age of Missing InformationImagine watching an entire day's worth of television on every single channel. Acclaimed environmental writer and culture critic Bill McKibben subjected himself to this sensory overload in an experiment to verify whether we are truly better informed than previous generations. Bombarded with newscasts and fluff pieces, game shows and talk shows, ads and infomercials, televangelist pleas and Brady Bunch episodes, McKibben processed twenty-four hours of programming on all ninety-three Fairfax, Virginia, cable stations. Then, as a counterpoint, he spent a day atop a quiet and remote mountain in the Adirondacks, exploring the unmediated man and making small yet vital discoveries about himself and the world around him. |
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Common terms and phrases
American appears AT&T Brady Bunch broadcast C-SPAN cable called camera commercial course culture dance decades Discovery Channel documentary Donna Reed earth Fairfax feel film forest girl global village going happened hard host human hundred idea images Jeanne Robert Foster Kalapana kids kind L.A. Law listen live look Marlo Thomas Marshall McLuhan McLuhan mean million Morning America mountain movie Nashville network natural world never newscast night offers percent perhaps planet pond produce rain reason recently reported reruns rock screen sense shopping channels sitcom society someone song species spend stars story stuff talk television tell there's things tion Today told Travel Channel trees turn Twin Peaks understand viewers watching TV week woman
References to this book
The Political Economy of Communication: Rethinking and Renewal Vincent Mosco No preview available - 1996 |