The Hollywood TV Producer: His Work and His Audience

The Hollywood TV Producer: His Work and His Audience

by Muriel G. Cantor
The Hollywood TV Producer: His Work and His Audience

The Hollywood TV Producer: His Work and His Audience

by Muriel G. Cantor

Paperback(Reprint)

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Overview

Except for accounts of journalists, dissident employees, and an occasional congressional committee focusing on crime and unethical practices, we have known very little about how television programs are produced. The Hollywood TV Producer, originally published in 1971, was the first serious examination of constraints, conflicts, and rewards in the daily lives of television producers. Its insights were important at the time and have not been challenged.Using as her framework the social system of mass communications, Muriel G. Cantor shows how producers select stories for television series and how movies end up in prime time. In order to get a comprehensive look at the inner workings of the TV industry and its producers, the author interviewed eighty producers in Hollywood over a two-season period. She probed to discover how the people producers work for and where they work influences their decision-making.As Cantor shows, critics of television who suggest that to remain in production, a producer must first please the business organization that finances his or her operations, are largely correct. Cantor shows that content is determined by a combination of artistic and professional factors, as well as social, economic, and political norms that have developed over time in the industry.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781412855785
Publisher: Transaction Publishers
Publication date: 05/30/2015
Edition description: Reprint
Pages: 242
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 8.90(h) x 1.90(d)

About the Author

Muriel G. Cantor was professor of sociology at the American University. Her works include Media, Audience, and Social Structure; Varieties of Work; and Prime-Time Television.

Table of Contents

ForewordPrefaceIntroduction to the Transaction Edition1. Introduction2. Social Criticism and Sociological Theory3. The Work Setting4. The Producer: His Training and Commitment5. The Producer and His Role Partners: Writers, Directors, and Actors6. The Producer and the Network: Professional versus Bureaucracy7. The Producer, Network Control, and Violence8. Summary and Conclusion9. The Producer and the Viewing Audience Appendix A The Interview Schedule Appendix B The Television Code, Sections I–IV Appendix C The Nielsen Ratings Appendix D Background Characteristics of ProducersReferences CitedIndex
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