Life According To TV, By Harry Waters

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“Life According to TV” by Harry Waters closely examines the studies of George Gerbner, and the effects of television on everyday life. Waters remains unbiased by crediting Gerbner at every turn. Gerbner explores television’s depiction and interpretation of sex, age, race, work, health, crime, and many other areas of social and personal life factors. Gerbner builds a firm case that television provides an incorrect interpretation of humanity’s existence and interaction with one another. Acting as a double-edged sword, television provides important information otherwise inaccessible by the masses, while also boosting stereotypes. The section about race deals with how television commonly gives the majority more time on the screen and in better roles …show more content…
Jay Pritchett sits at the head of this large and unconventional family. Now in his second marriage to his young wife, Gloria, Jay tries to adapt to life with her precocious 12-year-old son, Manny. Jay's grown daughter, Claire, and her husband, Phil, are the proud parents of three kids, Haley, Alex, and Luke, with whom they want that open and honest relationship. Claire's brother and Jay's grown son, Mitchell, is busy raising an adopted daughter, Lily, with his long-term partner, Cameron. In episode 1 of season 1, Jay recently married Gloria. Now Jay is trying hard to keep up with his much younger Colombian wife, along with her passionate pre-teen son, Manny. Claire tries hard to teach her children a lesson, while her husband Phil tries to prove to his three kids that he is cool, much to their embarrassment. Mitchell and his enthusiastic partner Cameron have just made a major life change by adopting a Vietnamese baby named Lily. This episode has multiple characters that adhere to Waters critique about

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