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The Angry Buzz - This Week and Current Affairs Television (Paperback, Illustrated Ed)
Loot Price: R1,083
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The Angry Buzz - This Week and Current Affairs Television (Paperback, Illustrated Ed)
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Current affairs television in the UK, in more than half a century
of programmes, has set out to tell us something we didn't know,
treating its audience as citizens with the right to demand that
'something must be done'. Over their 36 year history, the current
affairs series "This Week" and its replacement "TVEye", helped to
mark out that democratic project. This is the story of "This Week",
one of the few giants of the genre, set within the wider pattern of
'the angry buzz' of inquiry and dissent that is current affairs
television. This is a particularly timely tale, now that many fear
that current affairs may be an endangered species. Patricia Holland
follows "This Week" from its beginnings in the 1950s as a light
magazine programme with some serious moments, through the
challenging programmes of the 1970s - which brought home the
reality of poverty at home, famine in Africa and accusations of
torture in Northern Ireland. The story continues right up to its
demise in 1992, often blamed on its controversial programme "Death
on the Rock" on the shooting of IRA terrorists in Gibraltar. She
shows how "This Week" covered the spectrum of public affairs and
social issues in an uncompromising way, which regularly brought it
into conflict with the authorities. She also brings to life people
with a real sense of purpose and commitment and the realities of
digging behind the headlines against a highly charged international
political backdrop. "The Angry Buzz" also explores the development
of current affairs journalism. It looks at the scope of the current
affairs agenda; the practice of responsible journalism, while
producing attractive programmes; regulation and public service
television; 'tabloidisation' and dumbing down; and issues for women
working within a genre largely dominated by men. This history of
"This Week" and current affairs journalism is a live history, which
does not remain in the past, but has a real purchase on the present
- and the future.
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