Entry on Frontline, Public Broadcasting Series
| Abstract | The Public Broadcasting System’s series Frontline has served as one of the major documentary and public affairs program on American television since its debut in 1983. Emerging at a time when the U.S. television networks were dramatically cutting back on documentary and public affair’s television, producer David Fanning and his team have produced a series of award-winning programs on issues ranging from programs on the Gulf War, Afghanistan war, and Iraq to producer Ofra Bikel's investigation of the Little Rascals sexual abuse case to Martin Smith and Lowell Bergman's chronicle of America's drug wars | |||||||||
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Val E. Limburg (1989). The Decline of Broadcast Ethics: U.S. V. Nab. Journal of Mass Media Ethics 4 (2):214 – 231.
Allan Casebier (1985). The Ethical Dimension of Television News Broadcasting. Journal of Social Philosophy 16 (3):3-12.
R. Collins (2005). Book Review: Broadcasting and Convergence. New Articulations of the Public Service Remit. [REVIEW] Philosophy of the Social Sciences 35 (2):253-257.
Noël Carroll (1996). Theorizing the Moving Image. Cambridge University Press.
Yehiel Limor & Iné Gabel (2002). Five Versions of One Code of Ethics: The Case Study of the Israel Broadcasting Authority. Journal of Mass Media Ethics 17 (2):136 – 154.
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