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Entertainment
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Entertainment as an academic subject spans media studies, cultural studies, economics, and communication courses. It invites students to examine how societies produce, consume, and assign value to leisure and spectacle. What makes it intellectually compelling is the tension between entertainment as a commercial industry and as a cultural force — one that shapes language, identity, and shared reality. The topic demands that students think critically about power, asking who controls the forms of entertainment available to audiences and what ideological work those forms perform.

The papers archived here reflect a genuinely wide range of approaches. Some take an industry or market analysis angle, examining companies and economic structures such as the cruise line industry or executive compensation for athletes and celebrities. Others pursue cultural and social analysis, investigating how television affects everyday speech, how a reality show like the Kardashians program relates to a real ethnic community, or how pub and nightclub hours produce social effects. Media technology and measurement also appear as frameworks, with papers addressing audience rating systems and the debate over whether entertainment belongs inside news broadcasting.

A strong essay on entertainment needs a focused thesis that commits to one dimension — economic, cultural, linguistic, or political — rather than treating the subject as a vague backdrop. Evidence carries the most weight when it is specific: industry data, close textual analysis, or documented social outcomes drawn from credible sources. The most common pitfall is conflating description with argument, summarizing what entertainment is rather than making a defensible claim about how or why it functions the way it does in a particular context.

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Paper Undergraduate
Life After Work: A Case
Although retirement is almost never the primary issue in most working young adult's minds, most all Americans have come to expect and even look forward to a leisurely career of relaxation and entertainment once their…
Paper Undergraduate
Fiction Analysis of Passage From
Analysis of passage from Catch-22, by Joseph Heller (Originally published in 1955. New York: Dell Publishing, Inc., 1963)
Paper Undergraduate
Dubailand Perdier Has Five Days
Perdier has five days to table a comprehensive vision to bring Dubailand to fruition. This plan has several parameters that must be considered. The first set of parameters are the three critical elements -- credibility,…
Essay Doctorate
Computer Dependence the Story of Pandora\'s Box
This essay examines the relationship between humans and their computers. The essay argues that there is an over dependence on computer technology present in today's society and culture. Statistical information is coupled with opinion to determine that purpose and intent is more important than the means in which these tasks are accomplished.
Essay Doctorate
Kimberly-Clark Corporation: Global competition, ethics, and human resources strategy
Kimberly-Clark Corporation is a global manufacturing and marketing company in the consumer products business. The Company is currently concentrating new marketing efforts on emerging markets of Asia, Russia and Latin…
Paper Doctorate
Competitive forces analysis of a horror show cinemaplex case study
Perform a comprehensive analysis of the five competitive forces. Discuss what level of competition can be anticipated amongst industry rivals.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Willy Wonka and the Chocolate
Roald Dahl famously complained that the first film version of his seminal work, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory was a corruption that neutered the sting of his parable. The book is simply drawn and was intended to be…
Paper Undergraduate
SWOT Analysis: ABC/Reuters the Australian
The Australian Broadcasting Corporation has enjoyed some success in the Second Life virtual world. In 2007, they were receiving 1980 visits per week to their site (Winterford, 2007).
Essay Doctorate
Revolution Movies Marketing Workers Protection Acts Investigate
Community arts organizations depend crucially on the influence of the audience within the entertainment industry. In order to improve the level of operations within these organizations, it is essential to attract and retain audiences or consumers of the entertainment products. Community organizations adopt diversified approaches in attracting new markets or audience as well as maintaining the existing ones. The significance of audience attraction and maintenance reflects on the annual turnovers or earnings of the organization. The image and reputation of the organization develops through approaches adopted to build on the existing audiences.
Paper Doctorate
Media in the Courtroom High Profile Court
High profile court cases, especially murder trials and celebrity cases are more likely to attract the national media than ordinary cases that usually of no interest beyond the local level. These are also the kinds of cases when the issue of TV cameras in the courtroom is most significant, and when judges have to give serious thought to handing down gag orders that block all public discussion of the case for the duration of the trial. In this era of Internet, Facebook, 24-hour cable news and YouTube, any events or statements in the court can easily become ‘viral' and be seen instantly by millions of people around the world.