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Old 02-15-2005, 09:53 AM   #463 (permalink)
ARTelevision
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This book documents the notion – blatantly obvious to me - that we are influenced by the media. Specifically, it describes the manner in which violent media messages propagate violent behavior and violent tendencies in populations exposed to these messages.

It is beginning to seem to me that our blinders toward the larger issues having to do with media manipulation are indeed a powerful form of denial. There seems no other explanation for the manner in which we submit to media and refuse to express alarm over its power to affect our thinking and behavior.

Anyone who observes young people can also observe the overwhelming power of pop-cultural suggestion acting throughout their lives. Likewise, anyone who observes people of any age – it seems to me - should be able to see the same thing. The fact that we tend to minimize this and also the strength with which we disavow its effect on us personally is always noteworthy. We have a great deal invested in our self-images – as impregnable and under our own control.

A reading of this particular work should help make the case – in at least one area of media influence.

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The Copycat Effect : How the Media and Popular Culture Trigger the Mayhem in Tomorrow's Headlines

by Loren Coleman

Editorial Reviews
From Publishers Weekly


According to Coleman, the media's attitude is "death sells... if it bleeds, it leads." The author, who has written and lectured extensively on the impact of media, mounts a convincing case against newspapers, TV and books that sensationalize murders and suicides, thus encouraging others to imitate destructive crimes. He traces the problem's roots to Goethe's The Sorrows of Young Werther (1774), which spotlighted a fellow who shot himself over a failed romance and inspired many young men to do the same. The novel encouraged widespread use of the term "the Werther Effect" when referring to copycat catastrophes. Coleman addresses Marilyn Monroe's 1962 death, pointing out that thanks to extensive coverage of the star's passing, "the suicide rate in the United States increased briefly by 12%." Other subjects include the 2002 Washington-area snipers John Muhammad and John Lee Malvo, whose actions spawned numerous sniper killings; suicide clusters among fourth-century Greeks; cult leaders Charles Manson and David Koresh, who attained gruesome glamour through melodramatic press perusal; Jack the Ripper—who created copycat killers from the late 1800s into the 20th century—and today's suicide bombers. Although readers may feel there's little they can do to muzzle media destructiveness, Coleman presents his advice to with enough punch to intrigue the public and possibly exert a minor influence on the press.
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(from the Publisher)

VIOLENCE BEGETS VIOLENCE BEGETS VIOLENCE...

A disturbed student shoots up his classroom -- and suddenly a wave of mass murder is sweeping through our nation's schools. A young child is taken from her home -- and for months afterward child abductions are frantically reported on an almost daily basis. A surfer is attacked by a shark -- and the public spends an entire summer fearing an onslaught of the deadly underwater predators. Why do the terrible events we see in the media always seem to lead to more of the same?
Noted author and cultural behaviorist Loren Coleman explores how the media's over-saturated coverage of murders, suicides, and deadly tragedies makes an impact on our society. This is The Copycat Effect -- the phenomenon through which violent events spawn violence of the same type.
From recognizing the emerging patterns of the Copycat Effect, to how we can deal with and counteract its consequences as individuals and as a culture, Loren Coleman has uncovered a tragic flaw of the information age -- a flaw which must be corrected before the next ripples of violence spread.
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