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SUGGESTED LESSON PLANS
THE IMAGE OF THE BROADCAST
JOURNALIST
IN MOVIES AND TELEVISION
1937-2006
IJPC VIDEO EIGHT
Approximately 2:46:35
NOTE: There is some profanity and nudity in this video. Please
screen privately before showing it to your class. Key clips
to check: The 4400, The Accused, Anchorman: The Legend
of Ron Burgundy, Bridget Jones: The Edge of Reason, Family
Guy, Money Talks, Salvador, The Sopranos, South Park, The
Insider, Three Kings, Weekend Flash.
Here are some suggested Lesson Plans using this video or
supplementing it by showing the complete films excerpted on
the video:
1. Compare and contrast the image of the
broadcast journalist decade by decade. How has it changed?
What are the similarities and differences between radio journalists
and television journalists.
2. Discuss the image of the TV Anchorman,
from Ted Baxter in The Mary Tyler Moore Show to
Anchorman: the Legend of Ron Burgundy. Baxter was the
first time an anchorman was ridiculed on television. Other
examples to use in class: Saturday Night Live Weekend
Update, Cold Turkey, Wrong is Right, Special Bulletin, News
at Eleven, Broadcast News, Switching Channels, Max Headroom,
Network, RoboCop, E.N.G., Livin’ Large, The Simpsons,
Almost Golden, Up Close & Personal, The Newsroom, Mad
City, Deep Impact, From the Earth to the Moon: We Interrupt
This Program, Scary Movie 3, Brian Benben Show, The Daily
Show with Jon Stewart, Osmosis Jones, One on One, Less Than
Perfect, Good Morning, Miami, Bruce Almighty, Commercial:
Coke With Lime, The Colbert Report, Pepper Dennis.
3. Discuss the image of the radio journalist
in films such as Behind the Headlines, Love Is On the
Air, Mr. Smith Goes to Washington, Foreign Correspondent,
Meet John Doe, The Hindenburg,” Love and Hisses, Winchell,
Without Reservations, The Day The Earth Stood Still, Godzilla,
King of the Monsters, The Great Man, A Face in the Crowd.
4. Discuss the use of real-life journalists
in movies and television, the fine line between reality and
fiction. Effectiveness of real-life journalists giving credibility
to the films and TV programs in which they appear. Ethical
ramifications of real-life journalists appearing in a work
of fiction.
Examples on the tape include the following films:
1939 – Mr. Smith Goes to Washington - H.V.
Kaltenborn, one of the most famous radio broadcasters in history
reports from the Senate chambers about Mr. Smith’s heroic
filibuster.
1941 – Meet John Doe – Real-Life Radio
Correspondents Mike Frankovich, Knox Manning, and John B.
Hughes, well-known to radio audiences throughout the country,
report on the fictional John Doe convention.
1975 - The Hindenburg – the historic broadcast
of the Hindenburg crash by Radio Correspondent Herb Morrison
(“Oh the humanity….”).
1937 – Love and Hisses – Gossip Columnist
Walter Winchell, one of the most famous radio journalists
in history.
1946 – Without Reservations – Gossip
Columnist Louella Parsons could make and break careers in
Hollywood through her newspaper and radio columns.
1951 – The Day the Earth Stood Still –
World-famous radio correspondents Drew Pearson, H.V. Kaltenborn
and Elmer Davis report on the first alien spacecraft to arrive
on Earth.
1958 – I Want to Live! – George Putnam,
KTTV Reporter-Newscaster, is featured in the crowd of reporters
interviewing a woman sentenced to die.
1958 – War of the Colossal Beast – KTLA
newsman Stan Chambers is featured along with his station in
covering this sci-fi story.
1958 – Cry Terror – NBC-TV Broadcasters
Chet Huntley and Roy Neal are featured.
1964 – A Global Affair – Today Show and
Hugh Downs report on a baby left at the United Nations.
1964 – The Best Man – CBS Correspondents
Howard K. Smith and Bill Stout cover this fictional election
as they did real elections for the CBS network.
1971 – Love Machine – TV Anchorman Jerry
Dunphy is featured.
1971 – Bananas – TV Sportscasters Roger
Grimley and Howard Cossel cover the consummation of a marriage.
1976 – M*A*S*H: The Interview and 1978 –
M*A*S*H: Our Finest Hour – Correspondent Clete Roberts,
well-known TV interviewer and correspondent interviews the
men and women of the fictional M*A*S*H
1978 – The Rockford Files - KTLA Reporter-Commentator
Larry McCormick is featured.
1984 – Countdown to Looking Glass - CBS Commentator
Eric Severeid portrays himself as a commentator at a fictional
TV network.
1987 – RoboCop - TV’s Mario Machado and
Liza Gibbons are featured as fictional news anchors.
1988 – Tanner 88 – a variety of real-life
TV journalists are featured
1988-1998 – Murphy Brown - a variety of real-life
TV journalists are featured on the TV program but not in the
clips on this reel.
1995 – Indictment: The McMartin Trial - KABC-TV
Reporter Wayne Satz is played by an actor, but real-life KABC-TV
Anchor Jerry Dunphy portrays himself.
1995-2004 – JAG – Commentator Bill O’Reilly
and Entertainment Tonight’s Mary Hart.
1997 – Volcano - Many real-life local TV journalists
cover the volcano swallowing up Los Angeles.
1997 – Weapons of Mass Distraction –
TV Newsman Sander Vanocur
1998 – From the Earth to the Moon: We Interrupt
This Program – Real-life TV anchors such as Walter
Cronkite share the stage with a fictional anchorman.
1998 – LateLine – The McLaughlin Report,
Columnist-Commentator Jimmy Breslin.
1999-2006 - The Daily Show with Jon Stewart
2001 – 61* - Sportscaster Mel Allen is featured.
2006 – The West Wing: Election Day 2006 –
KNBC TV Anchor Paul Moyer for MSNBC.
5. Discuss the anonymous journalist traveling
in packs and the image that presents to the public both in
fiction and in real-life. Perhaps the most dominant and damaging
image of the journalist in popular culture is that of anonymous
reporters chasing after stories. In countless movies, television
programs, and novels, they travel in packs, usually armed
with television cameras and microphones. They cover fast-breaking
news by crowding, yelling, shouting, bullying, and forcing
their way into breaking news events. There were always such
packs of aggressive print journalists chasing after heroes
in movies, and they made a negative impact through the years,
but their zeal was usually taken in good spirits. Nowadays,
they appear far more menacing and out of control because their
lights, cameras, microphones, and tape recorders are jabbed
into faces of real people on television news and favorite
actors in movies and entertainment television programs.
Examples include: Irreconcilable Differences, Protocol,
Cobra, Legal Eagles, Switching Channels, The Accused, Miami
Vice, Patty Hearst, A Cry in the Dark, Big Man on Campus,
Roxanne: The Prize Pulitzer, Money, Power, Murder, The Preppie
Murder, Ricochet, The Positively True Adventures of the Alleged
Texas Cheerleader Murdering Mom, The Amy Fisher Story, Hidden
Agenda, While Justice Sleeps, Love & Betrayal, Indictment:
The McMartin Trial, Scary Movie 3, Final Justice, The Practice,
Charmed, Law & Order: Criminal Intent, Boston Legal, Simone,
Commercial: Chex Cereal, See Arnold Run, The Sopranos.
6. Discuss the image of the female broadcast
journalist. Compare and contrast it with the image of the
male broadcast journalist. Examples include: The Mary
Tyler Moore Show, Saturday Night Live, Network, Futureworld,
ChiPs, First, You Cry, The China Syndrome, The Electric Horseman,
Act of Violence, Eyes of a Stranger, Eyewitness, Wrong is
Right, The Seduction, V, Year of the Dragon, Reckless Disregard,
News at Eleven, Murrow, Good Night, and Good Luck, Hunter,
Broadcast News, Switching Channels, The Dead Pool, Tanner
88, Die Hard, Die Hard 2, Murphy Brown, The Simpsons, E.N.G.,
The Image, Eternity, Livin’ Large, Her Wicked Ways,
Coach, To Die For, Hero, Natural Born Killers, Love &
Betrayal, Almost Golden, Up Close & Personal, Scream,
Devil’s Food, Quack Pack, Mad City, Wrongfully Accused
The ,New Batman-Superman Adventures, Naked City, Brian Benben
Show, Muppets From Space, My Favorite Martian,Family Guy,
Three Kings, Third Watch, Scream 3, Running Mates, Walker,
Charmed, Osmosis Jones, Nash Bridges, Xena Warrior Princess,
Odyssey 5, Life Or Something Like It, Weekend Flash, Mr. Deeds,
Breaking News, Charmed, Live From Baghdad, Dead Like Me, Wanda
at Large, Bruce Almighty, Secret Santa, Category 6, Bridget
Jones: Edge of Reason, Anchorman: Legend of Ron Burgundy,
Claritin D, Criminal Minds, CSI: Miami, Hope & Faith,
The Colbert Report, How I Met Your Mother, The Sopranos, Pepper
Dennis.
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