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Website for television network called BET

tagged bet black entertainment music television videos by myna ...on 09-JUL-08
Carr, Steven Alan. From "Fucking Cops!" to "Fucking Media!": Bonnie and Clyde for a Sixties America. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2000
Steven Alan Carr’s essay From Fucking Cops to Fucking Media: Bonnie and Clyde for a Sixties America focuses on the cultural changes leading to and coming from Bonnie and Clyde. The article begins by outlining recent politician Bob Dole’s public outcry against media and its violent tendencies that deface “family values” (70). However, Carr compares Bob Dole’s deviant media (rappers, Murphy Brown, Natural Born Killers, etc) to Bonnie and Clyde, arguing that media now doesn’t represent a “mainstreaming of deviancy” but more of a debasement of media itself.
Carr then moves from the present to Bonnie and Clyde’s era, the birth of the counterculture in the 60s. Carr reminds us of the civil turmoil and transformation America as whole was undergoing. Vietnam, the civil rights movement and police brutality all excited the public’s mistrust of the state and authority as a whole. The American film industry was also undergoing a transformation of its own at the time with the demise of the studio system and the production code and the rise of influential foreign films from movements such as the French New Wave.
The 60s saw the birth of the counterculture, young adults who considered themselves on the margins of society. Many of the most influential voices of the time, such as Allan Ginsberg, were arrested for protesting the government. The government, in turn, reacted by “spying” on hundreds of thousands of citizens in an attempt to crack down on civil unrest and dissatisfaction with their government. This attempt, however, only served to solidify the defining aspect of the counterculture: their hatred of authority and control.
Carr uses these historical examples of 60s culture to place Bonnie and Clyde as the most influential film to date, and as a turning point in American cinema and consumerism. The film reflected the feelings and idealizations of the counterculture through its glorification of two criminals fight against authority and societal norms. The film was immensely popular, but received heavy criticism from film critics and public opinion groups, eventually leading to its withdrawal from theatres within the U.S. This, just like the government’s attempt to control dissent through spying, only served to bring the film to further prominence as a cult icon of sorts. The film, however, did more than just reflect the turmoil of the times and gave birth to the consumerization of the counterculture. The film helped present the counterculture, mostly young adults and teenagers, as the target audience for a new genre of film tailored directly to their desires. Bonnie and Clyde allowed the marginal, outcasts of society (as they saw themselves) to achieve consumerist prominence in America.
Gerbner, George and Larry Gross. "Telvision Violence, Victimization, and Power." American Behavioral Scientist JUN 1980 705-716 
 
 
The 1980 communications article Television Violence, Victimization and Power by Georger Gerbner and Larry Gross discusses the influence of violence in media on its viewers. The article studies television programs between 1967 and 1968 and catalogues their use of violence. The study shows that within those years, 80% of all primetime and weekend programs contain violence in some form. This clearly shows the prominence of media violence in this period and the concern of the public on this topic.
The essay states, “violence is the key to the rule of power” (708) and shows how mostly men and white characters use violence to capture their dominance. The research in the essay shows that heavy television viewing results in a fear of violence along with a misjudgment of the amount of violence around us. The essay concludes by saying that violence has become the easiest way for television creators to create drama due to censorship laws.
Although this essay has nothing to do with Bonnie and Clyde, the study on the consequences of violence through 1960s television is important in understanding the films plentiful use of violence. There was no doubt that violence was prominent in the 1960s with images of the Vietnam War and civil rights movements dominating the screens of the American people. Bonnie and Clyde took advantage of the American obsession with visual violence, but did so in a way that justified and glamorized violence. Although the effects that the essay claims appear from watching excessive television, Bonnie and Clyde appealed to an audience that was already overwhelmed with violence, and was eager to welcome the camp portrayal of murder and death. And the essay’s assertion that power arises from violence, Bonnie and Clyde is the supreme example because of the overwhelming pop culture influence that the original pair and film had on the cinema as a whole as well as the public’s expectations of violence and censorship.
belongs to Bonnie & Clyde project
tagged 60s communications entertainment media power research study violence by mrsilva ...on 10-APR-08
Steele, Robert. The Good-Bad and Bad-Good in Movies: Bonnie and Clyde and In Cold Blood. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall Inc., 1973 
 
 
Robert Steele’s essay in John G. Cawelti’s Focus on Bonnie and Clyde discusses two of the most important film critics’ opinions of the violence in the film regarding Bonnie and Clyde. A conversation between Richard Schickel, a critic for Time magazine, and Bosley Crowther, a former critic for The New York Times becomes the basis for the article regarding violence in cinema and the moral obligations of both the filmmakers and critics alike. Schickel adopts the opinion that it is a filmmaker’s responsibility to reflect the times, which would of course include portraying violence. Crowther, however, agrees with that statement, but believes that Bonnie & Clyde, “had gone beyond the bounds of good taste and judgment in the way it presented these killers” (115).
Steele’s follows the conversation with a critique of the two critics’ views by examining how and for what reason violence is used in the film. Steele’s main argument revolves around the difference between art and entertainment, “art is entertainment, and some entertainment may be art” (117). He believes that Schickel’s claim that films should represent society would be true should it apply to documentaries, but Arthur Penn’s film strives to be art, and not simply a truthful depiction.
Steele, while defending the use of violence to a certain extent, finds complaints with the film from an artistic viewpoint instead. Slow motion and fast paced editing in the final shootout separate the deaths of Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow from every other death in the film elevating them to a heroic status, but for what purpose? He classifies the film as taking, “a tragic stance without giving us a tragedy” (119). Steele feels that Penn’s use of artistic editing and cinematic devices become “shenanigans” (120) because they are meant simply to disguise the underlying unpleasantness of a story where the two beautiful heroes die. In this sense, Penn’s stunning and artistic use of violence adds nothing to the film other than making it entertainment genius.
The story of Linux and open source software is one of the most sensational tales of technology in recent history. What started as the brainchild of a handful of dedicated individuals (Torvalds, Stallman, et al) has ballooned to a multi-million-member movement that is both idealistically appealing and financially sound - just ask the multitude of companies relying on - or profiting from - the use of Linux. But this movement has created something of a parallel universe in the software world - one where intellectual property rights are turned on their head. While most companies in the technology and entertainment industries (which are increasingly influenced by each other) launch intellectual property battles on a grand scale, those behind the free software movement eschew protection of intellectual property rights and have created both products and business models that are successful without these protections. I take a critical look at the output of the Free Software movement (both products and business models based on it) and specifically the way that its views toward protection of intellectual property rights has affected that output. What is the nature of the free software movement and its products, especially with respect to corporate involvement and sponsorship? I show that although the free software movement has been successful in many of its endeavours, the ideal of a world where all software is essentially a community-developed public good, provided unrestricted and free of charge to everyone, is unrealistic. The free software movement is as helped by traditional software-for-profit business models as it seeks to overturn them. Futhermore, there are areas where the free software industry is especially hindered (although not doomed), particularly in the areas of entertainment and usability.

This is an article from the Wahab & Medenica law firm's media blog which deals with issues of intellectual property. This blog entry explains the significance of emerging laws in response to the growing trend of copying fashion designs. Designers have been trying even harder these days to protect their works and as a result Congress proposes a new method. The Design Piracy Prohibition Act proposes a limited three year term for fashion designs that commences upon whichever is earlier the date of publication of registration or the date the design is first made public.  Under this act the term fashion is defined broadly to include everything from handbags to footwear. The blog goes on to explain the current status of Copyright laws in regards to fashion design.  Two cases are presented in order to challenge the issue of the functionality hurdle which designers face when trying to protect their work.  The most important case is the Kieselstein v. Accessories by Pearl in which the court granted Kieselstein the right to copyright the design of the belt buckle. Even though this is a step in the right direction for fashion protection, there are no cases which deal with the protection of garments of clothing. The United States does not protect fashion designs but France and England do and this article suggest that the United States should follow their lead. The proposed Design Piracy Prohibition Act will follow in the steps of the E.U. regulation which currently protects fashion designs in the form of registered and unregistered community designs. This new act will address the copycat culture which has grown tremendously within the fashion industry. Even though the act will protect the original designer, it will severely restrict a designer's ability to emulate the styles of others.  The importance of this article to my thesis is the proposition of an alternate method of fashion protection, The Design Piracy Prohibition Act.  Even though this act has not been passed yet, the blog explains what might happen if it is passed as well as provides background information about the act itself.  

Penn's favorite Arts & Entertainment DP Thursday insert is online!
tagged DP comedy entertainment journalism news by hennefem ...on 24-FEB-06