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If It Bleeds, It Leads
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If It Bleeds, It Leads

An Anatomy Of Television News

If It Bleeds, It Leads

An Anatomy Of Television News

ByMatthew Robert Kerbel
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 2001
eBook Published 8 March 2018
Pub. location New York
Imprint Routledge
DOIhttps://doi.org/10.4324/9780429499944
Pages 164 pages
eBook ISBN 9780429968495
SubjectsSocial Sciences
KeywordsExtreme Sex, Local News, Television Anchors, U-Haul Truck, Disembodied Male Voice
Get Citation

Get Citation

Kerbel, M. (2001). If It Bleeds, It Leads. New York: Routledge, https://doi.org/10.4324/9780429499944
ABOUT THIS BOOK

You've been watching television news forever. You're intimately familiar with the friendly faces and soothing voices that nightly tell you what's wrong with the world. You think you know everything there is to know about them. You're wrong.If It Bleeds, It Leads takes us minute-by-minute through two-and-one-half real hours of syndicated, local, and network information programming to uncover the truth behind what passes as news. Why is the only real difference between Jerry Springer and Dan Rather that Dan's guests usually don't need medical attention? How did a load of baking powder spark two minutes of high-strung local news coverage? It's all here: the personal revelations of talk show guests; the dangers lurking in your neighborhood; sports; sex; celebrity; power; and weather updates every ten minutes--all real material taken from real broadcasts designed to keep viewers glued to the screen.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter |11 pages
Hour One: Syndicated Talk
(The Actual Program You See Will Vary Depending on Where You Live)
ByMatthew R. Kerbel
View abstract
chapter |65 pages
Hour Two: Live at Five
(Dead by Six)
ByMatthew R. Kerbel
View abstract
chapter |50 pages
Hour Three: Network
ByMatthew R. Kerbel
View abstract
chapter |3 pages
Postscript: The Sky Keeps Falling
ByMatthew R. Kerbel
View abstract
chapter |4 pages
Closing Comments
ByMatthew R. Kerbel
View abstract

You've been watching television news forever. You're intimately familiar with the friendly faces and soothing voices that nightly tell you what's wrong with the world. You think you know everything there is to know about them. You're wrong.If It Bleeds, It Leads takes us minute-by-minute through two-and-one-half real hours of syndicated, local, and network information programming to uncover the truth behind what passes as news. Why is the only real difference between Jerry Springer and Dan Rather that Dan's guests usually don't need medical attention? How did a load of baking powder spark two minutes of high-strung local news coverage? It's all here: the personal revelations of talk show guests; the dangers lurking in your neighborhood; sports; sex; celebrity; power; and weather updates every ten minutes--all real material taken from real broadcasts designed to keep viewers glued to the screen.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter |11 pages
Hour One: Syndicated Talk
(The Actual Program You See Will Vary Depending on Where You Live)
ByMatthew R. Kerbel
View abstract
chapter |65 pages
Hour Two: Live at Five
(Dead by Six)
ByMatthew R. Kerbel
View abstract
chapter |50 pages
Hour Three: Network
ByMatthew R. Kerbel
View abstract
chapter |3 pages
Postscript: The Sky Keeps Falling
ByMatthew R. Kerbel
View abstract
chapter |4 pages
Closing Comments
ByMatthew R. Kerbel
View abstract
CONTENTS
ABOUT THIS BOOK

You've been watching television news forever. You're intimately familiar with the friendly faces and soothing voices that nightly tell you what's wrong with the world. You think you know everything there is to know about them. You're wrong.If It Bleeds, It Leads takes us minute-by-minute through two-and-one-half real hours of syndicated, local, and network information programming to uncover the truth behind what passes as news. Why is the only real difference between Jerry Springer and Dan Rather that Dan's guests usually don't need medical attention? How did a load of baking powder spark two minutes of high-strung local news coverage? It's all here: the personal revelations of talk show guests; the dangers lurking in your neighborhood; sports; sex; celebrity; power; and weather updates every ten minutes--all real material taken from real broadcasts designed to keep viewers glued to the screen.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter |11 pages
Hour One: Syndicated Talk
(The Actual Program You See Will Vary Depending on Where You Live)
ByMatthew R. Kerbel
View abstract
chapter |65 pages
Hour Two: Live at Five
(Dead by Six)
ByMatthew R. Kerbel
View abstract
chapter |50 pages
Hour Three: Network
ByMatthew R. Kerbel
View abstract
chapter |3 pages
Postscript: The Sky Keeps Falling
ByMatthew R. Kerbel
View abstract
chapter |4 pages
Closing Comments
ByMatthew R. Kerbel
View abstract

You've been watching television news forever. You're intimately familiar with the friendly faces and soothing voices that nightly tell you what's wrong with the world. You think you know everything there is to know about them. You're wrong.If It Bleeds, It Leads takes us minute-by-minute through two-and-one-half real hours of syndicated, local, and network information programming to uncover the truth behind what passes as news. Why is the only real difference between Jerry Springer and Dan Rather that Dan's guests usually don't need medical attention? How did a load of baking powder spark two minutes of high-strung local news coverage? It's all here: the personal revelations of talk show guests; the dangers lurking in your neighborhood; sports; sex; celebrity; power; and weather updates every ten minutes--all real material taken from real broadcasts designed to keep viewers glued to the screen.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter |11 pages
Hour One: Syndicated Talk
(The Actual Program You See Will Vary Depending on Where You Live)
ByMatthew R. Kerbel
View abstract
chapter |65 pages
Hour Two: Live at Five
(Dead by Six)
ByMatthew R. Kerbel
View abstract
chapter |50 pages
Hour Three: Network
ByMatthew R. Kerbel
View abstract
chapter |3 pages
Postscript: The Sky Keeps Falling
ByMatthew R. Kerbel
View abstract
chapter |4 pages
Closing Comments
ByMatthew R. Kerbel
View abstract
ABOUT THIS BOOK
ABOUT THIS BOOK

You've been watching television news forever. You're intimately familiar with the friendly faces and soothing voices that nightly tell you what's wrong with the world. You think you know everything there is to know about them. You're wrong.If It Bleeds, It Leads takes us minute-by-minute through two-and-one-half real hours of syndicated, local, and network information programming to uncover the truth behind what passes as news. Why is the only real difference between Jerry Springer and Dan Rather that Dan's guests usually don't need medical attention? How did a load of baking powder spark two minutes of high-strung local news coverage? It's all here: the personal revelations of talk show guests; the dangers lurking in your neighborhood; sports; sex; celebrity; power; and weather updates every ten minutes--all real material taken from real broadcasts designed to keep viewers glued to the screen.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter |11 pages
Hour One: Syndicated Talk
(The Actual Program You See Will Vary Depending on Where You Live)
ByMatthew R. Kerbel
View abstract
chapter |65 pages
Hour Two: Live at Five
(Dead by Six)
ByMatthew R. Kerbel
View abstract
chapter |50 pages
Hour Three: Network
ByMatthew R. Kerbel
View abstract
chapter |3 pages
Postscript: The Sky Keeps Falling
ByMatthew R. Kerbel
View abstract
chapter |4 pages
Closing Comments
ByMatthew R. Kerbel
View abstract

You've been watching television news forever. You're intimately familiar with the friendly faces and soothing voices that nightly tell you what's wrong with the world. You think you know everything there is to know about them. You're wrong.If It Bleeds, It Leads takes us minute-by-minute through two-and-one-half real hours of syndicated, local, and network information programming to uncover the truth behind what passes as news. Why is the only real difference between Jerry Springer and Dan Rather that Dan's guests usually don't need medical attention? How did a load of baking powder spark two minutes of high-strung local news coverage? It's all here: the personal revelations of talk show guests; the dangers lurking in your neighborhood; sports; sex; celebrity; power; and weather updates every ten minutes--all real material taken from real broadcasts designed to keep viewers glued to the screen.

TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter |11 pages
Hour One: Syndicated Talk
(The Actual Program You See Will Vary Depending on Where You Live)
ByMatthew R. Kerbel
View abstract
chapter |65 pages
Hour Two: Live at Five
(Dead by Six)
ByMatthew R. Kerbel
View abstract
chapter |50 pages
Hour Three: Network
ByMatthew R. Kerbel
View abstract
chapter |3 pages
Postscript: The Sky Keeps Falling
ByMatthew R. Kerbel
View abstract
chapter |4 pages
Closing Comments
ByMatthew R. Kerbel
View abstract
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