Irritating, shocking, and intolerable TV programs: Norms, values, and concerns of viewers in The Netherlands
-
Ard Heuvelman
, Allerd Peeters and Jan van Dijk
Abstract
This study investigates the negative reactions of Dutch viewers to the content of television programs. The results show that a vast majority is sometimes irritated by TV programs, that a somewhat smaller majority is sometimes shocked by the programs, and that one fifth of the viewing population consider certain programs to be intolerable. The most frequently mentioned genres are games, shows, and related entertainment programs, while reality TV (scoring high on all negative reactions), news and current affairs (often shocking), and sex (often intolerable) are primarily evaluated as irritating. It appears that violent and frightening material creates by far the largest category of negative responses. Intimidating behavior worries the viewers most, immediately followed by the violation of privacy. This article also discusses the consequences of these results for broadcasting policy in the Netherlands.
Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG
Articles in the same Issue
- Conceptualizing television news interpretation by its viewers: The concept of interpretive complexity
- Media Diversity
- Irritating, shocking, and intolerable TV programs: Norms, values, and concerns of viewers in The Netherlands
- Television viewing and adolescent females’ body dissatisfaction: The mediating role of opposite sex expectations
- Framing Latin America in the Spanish press: A cooled down friendship between two fraternal lands
- Book Reviews
Articles in the same Issue
- Conceptualizing television news interpretation by its viewers: The concept of interpretive complexity
- Media Diversity
- Irritating, shocking, and intolerable TV programs: Norms, values, and concerns of viewers in The Netherlands
- Television viewing and adolescent females’ body dissatisfaction: The mediating role of opposite sex expectations
- Framing Latin America in the Spanish press: A cooled down friendship between two fraternal lands
- Book Reviews