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Love, Light, and a Dream is a timely and provocative look at the medium of television as one of the cultural vehicles carrying us toward the 21st century. It provides an up-to-the-minute review of developments and trends shaping the policy and regulatory issues that exert the strongest influence on the evolution of information technology.Topics covered in this study include the Federal Communications Commission and its role as a regulatory body, the relationship between cable services and telephone systems as information providers, television advertising campaigns and the structure of the agency business, public television and its struggle for financial independence, and the culture of television news and the creation of a journalistic mythology.
JAMES ROMAN is Associate Professor of Media Studies at Hunter College. His publications include works on the funding and culture of both cable and public television. He is the author of Cablemania (1983).
Introduction Synergy: A Consolidation of Hardware and Software Strategies for Success: Networks and Independent Stations The FCC: The Airwaves and the Public Interest A History of Programming: Television's Evolution Programming Staples: Enduring Genres Merchants of News Electronic Currency: The Bottom Line of Television Technology and Change Public Broadcasting: Its Dwindling Account Toward a Wired Nation: Cable TV Bibliography Index