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Mass shooting contagion theory is the studied nature and effect of media coverage of mass shootings and the potential increase of mimicked events. [1] Academic study of this theory has grown in recent years due to the nature of mass shooting events, frequency of references to previous rampage shooters as inspiration and the acquisition of fame using violence, particularly in the United States. [2]
The 2017 film Speech & Debate is about a group of high school students trying to revive their debate team. [93] The 2018 romantic comedy Candy Jar is about two rival high school debaters competing for college scholarships. [94] The 2022 documentary Girl Talk follows five female high school debaters in Massachusetts. [95]
Pages in category "Mass media-related controversies in the United States" The following 128 pages are in this category, out of 128 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Folkerts, Jean and Dwight Teeter, eds. Voices of a Nation: A History of Mass Media in the United States (5th Edition, 2008) Fourie, Pieter J. Media Studies: Media History, Media and Society (2008) Graber, Doris A., and Johanna Dunaway. Mass media and American politics (CQ Press, 2017) Martin, James B. (2002). Mass Media: a bibliography with ...
Mass media-related controversies in India (5 C, 15 P) Internet-related controversies (10 C, 69 P) Islam-related mass media and entertainment controversies (5 P)
We've compiled a list of relatively safe subjects — open-ended, locally rooted topics likely to draw disagreement but probably not blood. No politics, no religion, no FIFA, no tacos.
From foreign policy to immigration to the economy, NBC News logged the subjects the candidates touched on during the September 2024 presidential debate.
Mass media use by the Islamic State; Mazey Day (Black Mirror) Jonathan McIntosh; Media and gender; Media and LGBT youth of colour in the United States; Media bias; Media circus; Media coverage of Bernie Sanders; Media coverage of the COVID-19 pandemic; Media culture; Media democracy; Media feeding frenzy; Media panic; Media portrayal of asexuality