Abstract
This work investigates the influence of geo-cultural proximity and exposure to news and crime-action drama on the cultivation effect. A content analysis of prime-time programming (N = 63 hours) was used to compose questions about the prevalence of policemen, lawyers, and salesmen in the USA and Israel. A sample of 655 students answered the questions. Viewing of American programming is significantly correlated with a tendency to hold a biased estimation of the prevalence of all three occupations in America in a manner that resembles the world of TV content. Viewing of Israeli programs has no such impact. Viewing of news and crime-action drama and general viewing have no systematic influence on the estimations made about any of the countries.
© Walter de Gruyter
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- Cultural proximity in TV entertainment: An eight-country study on the relationship of nationality and the evaluation of U.S. prime-time fiction
- A case for an integrative view on affect regulation through media usage
- Telling what yesterday's news might be tomorrow: Modeling media dynamics
- Geo-cultural proximity, genre exposure, and cultivation
- ICT performance in processes of knowledge sharing in organizations: A review of literature
- Book Reviews
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Artikel in diesem Heft
- Cultural proximity in TV entertainment: An eight-country study on the relationship of nationality and the evaluation of U.S. prime-time fiction
- A case for an integrative view on affect regulation through media usage
- Telling what yesterday's news might be tomorrow: Modeling media dynamics
- Geo-cultural proximity, genre exposure, and cultivation
- ICT performance in processes of knowledge sharing in organizations: A review of literature
- Book Reviews
- Contributors