A Cultural History of Advertising
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A peek at the past, present and future implications of our consumer culture
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MediaPost Publications Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Was A Trekkie 01/16/2013

Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Was A Trekkie - 01/16/2013

"As the nation celebrates Martin Luther King Day on Jan. 21, it's a good time to remember how television can play a critical role in challenging and changing public opinion. As the journalist Howard K. Smith   said of the television news coverage of the Civil Rights movement in his Archive of American Television interview, “I think even people who were biased on civil rights saw these pictures every night at the dinner hour -- people beating up blacks, siccing dogs onto them -- and they said, ‘This has got to stop! Something must be done.’ I think that television really was a decisive fact. That and the powerful will of Lyndon Johnson to be a success in legislation and the wonderful eloquence of Martin Luther King.”

Not only did TV news bring the country (and the world) face to face with the day-to-day reality of the struggle, but entertainment television also played a subtle, yet important, role. One of my favorite stories in our archive is one that Nichelle Nichols,  famous for her role as Chief Communications Officer Nyota Uhura on “Star Trek,” tells of her moving encounter with Dr. King. (See the full 12-minute interview excerpt here ):.....

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CPAC - The Fifties documenting the post-war decade that gave birth to modern Canada. The Fifties

CPAC - The Fifties documenting the post-war decade that gave birth to modern Canada. The Fifties | A Cultural History of Advertising | Scoop.it
CPAC - the Cable Public Affairs Channel - is your number one source for all that is Canadian politics and for current events within Canada's government, the House of Commons, and the Senate.

 

features extraordinary interviews and never-before-seen archival film. Experience the decade that was shaped by an explosion of teenagers, scarred by Cold War fears and espionage, marked by an exodus to the suburbs, and captured by a new medium called television. Relive the era that changed Canada forever.

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