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40 notecards = 10 pages (4 cards per page)

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COM 102

front 1

According to Edward Bernays, Public relations has three functions. Name them.

back 1

Informing, Persuading, and Integrating

front 2

What are the five steps in the ROPES public relations model?

back 2

Research, Objectives, Programming, Evaluation, and Stewardship.

front 3

Name one way discussed in the book or in class in which the Internet makes public relations more difficult.

back 3

It lets anyone say anything about a company, it allows rumor to spread, it spreads news rapidly nation if not world wide, it makes it easy for people to leak confidential information, pranksters can get an immediate global audiences for their material that damages a brand.

front 4

John Rawls' "Veil of ignorance" means which of the following?

back 4

Justice is possible when decisions are made without considering the social status of the people involved.

front 5

Which of the following would e an example of potential corporate conflict of interest?

back 5

giving positive coverage of charity event being chaired by the golfing buddy of your tv station's owner. Covering a sports franchise owned by the same parent company as your radio station. Reporting about another media corporation which is a partner of your parent company.

front 6

Which of the following advertisers would be held to the highest standard of truthfulness.

back 6

An ad that said a pill was the "fastest headache remedy your doctor can prescribe."

front 7

Briefly explain how integrated marketing communication (IMC) differs from traditional advertising.

back 7

IMC is an overall communication strategy for reaching key audiences using advertising public relations sales promotion and interactive media. IMC is a long-term approach used to build the value of a brand or organization.

front 8

State two of the for myths of advertising.

back 8

Advertising makes you by things you don't want
Advertising makes things cost more
Advertising elp sell bad products
Advertising is a waste of money.

front 9

Briefly define targeted advertising

back 9

Targeted advertising is the process of trying to make a product or service appeal to a narrowly defined group. Groups may be targeted using demographics and geographic and/or psychographics.

front 10

Define advertsing clutter, why it concerns advertiser and wha is being done about it.

back 10

Clutter is the large number of non-programming messages (including ads) that compete for viewer attention on radio, television, the internet and other media. It concerns advertisers because the fear teir ads will get lost in the clutter. The solution is to create ads that stand out, ads that people want to watch or to advertise in less cluttered environments.

front 11

Define "economy of abundance"

back 11

This is when there are as may or more goods available as there are people who want to buy them.

front 12

What made Henry Luce famous?

back 12

He was the driving force behind TIme, Life. and Fortune magazines and founded the company that grew in to media giant Time Warner.

front 13

Name three of the seven sisters.

back 13

Good House keeping, McCall's (Rosie), Redbook, Ladies' Home Journal, Woman's Day, Better Homes and Gardens, and Family Circle.

front 14

List Three of Dick Stolley's rules for successful magazine covers.

back 14

Young is better than old. pretty is better then ugly. rich is better than poor. Music is better than movies. Movies are better than television. nothing is better than a dead celebrity.

front 15

Identify James Potter's four major dinensions of media leteracy

back 15

Cognitive, emotional. aesthetic, and moral.

front 16

Identify the four major mass communication models discussed in class

back 16

SMCR (or Transmission), Ritual Publicity, Reception

front 17

What is a heterogeneous audiences

back 17

An audience made up of a mix of people who differ in age, gender, income, and other demorgraphics.

front 18

Describe the significance of the New York Sun with the penny press and how they changed newspapers.

back 18

Penny Paters like the sun were founded starting in the 1830's and were supported primarily by advertising rather than by subscription or political subsidies. They were usually independent voices rather tahn that of political party. They concept of news and beats- the latest developments of he police, the courts, and the streets- was invented by the penny papers. The concept of objectivity originated with the penny papers as a way of making them appeal to the largest possibly audience.

front 19

Other than language, how do the Miami Herald and El Nuevo Herald differ

back 19

El Nuevo Herald takes a much more activist point of view, in the tradition of European and Latin American newspapers.

front 20

Name two sources from the textbook people are turing to for news.

back 20

The Web, PDA's, iPods, and MP3 Players.

front 21

What is an illuminated manuscript?

back 21

A hand-copid manuscript with elaborate illustration and calligraphy, generally popular just prior to the pre-printing press era.

front 22

Briefly discuss how the printing press chaned the 15th and the 16th century world.

back 22

Gutenberg's development of the printing press and the typemold moved culture from the local community to the regional, national or international level. It lead to the standardized books, language and spelling. It made it much more difficult for governments and the church to control the free flow of information and facilitated such events as the Protestant Reformation, the rise of nation-states and the Scientific Revolution.

front 23

Why did The New York Times create a separate children's best seller list?

back 23

Because children's titles, especially Harry Potter books, were coming to dominate the regular fiction bestseller list.

front 24

Name a long-tail bookseller and explain what makes it part of the long tail

back 24

Amazong.com or Barnes and Nobel.com are both long-tail bookstores because they carry virtually every book that in print and many books that are out of print

front 25

Briefly discuss why we have the movie rating system we have today and where it came from. What are the major complaints about it and what is Hollywood's response?

back 25

The current movie rating system came out of the decline of the production code in the 1960's. As movies started having edgier content, the film industry under the leadership of Jack Valenti, saw the need for a set of rules that would allow adult content while keeping local censors at bay. They developed an age based system that has been revised several times to guarantee that most movies are allowed to be sown in most communities. The biggest criticisms of the system is that it can be hard for parents to tell why a movie has been given a rating and that the rating system is designed to bring in the largest possibly audiences. As of now, there is not a viable rating for adult-only movies, with most theaters declining to show NC-17 films. The MPAA defends the rating system by saying parents find it helpful.

front 26

List two of the many problems filmmakers faced when they went from silent to talking films.

back 26

Some actor had trouble speaking and could not make the transition; movie sets were not quite; showing talking movies required new equipment; it was hard to make talking picture visually interesting.

front 27

Name the South Western community that might have become Hollywood had it not been for the summer monsoons.

back 27

Flagstaff.

front 28

"I could had class. I could been a contender. I could been someone, Charley, instead of a bum, which is what I am, let's face it. I'm a bum.

back 28

On the Waterfront

front 29

You're Norma Desmond. You used to be in silent picture. You used to be big. "I am big. Its the pictures that got small."

back 29

Sunset Boulevard.

front 30

Briefly explain what New York Times v Sullivan was about and what the long-term implication of the case has been.

back 30

New York Times v Sullivan was a civil rights era libel case in which Montgomery, Alabama, police commissioner sued the New York Times for libel based on some false statements made in the newspaper ad. The Supreme Court could have ruled narrowly the ad was not libelous, that Sullivan was not identified in the ad or that the falsehoods were innocuous. Instead, the court ruled that journalists were protected and charges of libel when reporting on the public officials as long as there was no 'actual malice," that is, a knowing or reckless disregard of the truth.

front 31

What is the major challenge faced by U.S. obscenity law in the 21st Century

back 31

The law defines obscenity in terms of local community standards, but pornography is now available through nationwide sources such as the internet or satellite television.

front 32

What are the four forms of invasion of privacy in the United States

back 32

Intrusion, embarrassment/private facts, false light, (mis) appropriation

front 33

Briefly explain how recording artists have resonded in the 21st Century to the threats of file sharing and other new digital media to their ability to make a living

back 33

They have a number of ways they can respond: selling music directly to consumers, performing live, using free music on the Web to attract new listeners, including bonus video and other materials in their cds and other merchandise sales.

front 34

What makes talk sports radio so popular with advertisers

back 34

people get so involved with the programming to which they are listening so that they do not change the station when they are listening.

front 35

How do webcasting and podcasting differ from each other

back 35

Webcasting is streamed over the internet while podcasts are downloadable MP3 files that can be listened to offline.

front 36

Briefly explain how Apple has become a major player in the media business

back 36

This happened in several ways. Apple sells many of the most popular portable media consumption devices, it sells and rents media programming (and in fact makes more money from selling media content and media consumption devices than it does from selling computers) and its former Chief Executive Officer, the late State Jobs, is the former owner of the PIXAR animation studio as well as being Disney's largest single stockholder.

front 37

List two of the four principles of the hacker ethos

back 37

'Access to computers-and anything which might teach you something about the way the world works-should be 'unlimited and total'"
"All information wants to be free"
"Mistrust authority-promote decentralization"
you should be judged by your skill san not by, "bogus criteria such as degrees, age, race, or position"

front 38

What is reverse synergy

back 38

When new media combine and bring together the worst of old a new media. An example would be when the internet spreads false supermarket tabloid rumors rapidly nationwide.

front 39

Media journalist Ken Auletta argues television has been undergoing an, "earthquake in slow motion." What is meant by that and what keeps it going slow today?

back 39

Auletta's contention is that the gradual loss of network television views in the late 1980s and the early 1990s to cable satellite and home video and that the legacy networks largely ignored it as it happened. The earth quake is continuing with the new digital alternatives to broadcast television

front 40

Why are cable networks more profitable than the broadcast networks?

back 40

Cable shows are typically much more inexpensive to produce than broadcast network programming. Also, cable channels have both advertising and subscription revenue, while broadcasting networks have basically only advertising revenue.