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Jacob P. Wong-Campbell; Lisa Delacruz Combs; Marc P. Johnston-Guerrero; Rebecca Cepeda – Journal Committed to Social Change on Race and Ethnicity, 2024
Multiracial youth are one of the fastest-growing demographics in the United States. What messages might these multiracial young people be receiving about multiraciality in college-related television series? Applying Critical Race Media Literacy and Critical Multiracial Theory (MultiCrit), this study examines representations of multiracial students…
Descriptors: Mass Media Role, Television, Programming (Broadcast), Multiracial Persons
Sauls, Samuel J. – 1995
As with commercial stations, the underlying premise of the college radio station is to serve the community, whether it be the campus community or the community at large, but in unique ways often geared to underserved niches of the population. Much of college radio's charm lies in its unpredictable nature and constant mutations. The stations give…
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, College Students, Colleges, Experiential Learning
Sauls, Samuel J. – 1998
To help ascertain leadership, guidance, and capabilities of the station advisor (those who foster the efforts of their student staffs), this paper provides an overview of programming elements discussing such topics as programming philosophy, general formats, and legal and ethical issues. It states that those advising the campus radio station can…
Descriptors: College Students, Communications, Faculty Advisers, Higher Education
Sauls, Samuel J. – 1998
College radio is quite often viewed as the true alternative to commercial radio. However, what is alternative radio and how does college radio factor into the ideal? To further understand this concept, this paper focuses on the role of alternative programming in college radio. Areas discussed include alternative radio as a non-mainstream form of…
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Audience Response, Broadcast Industry, Censorship
McKenzie, Robert – 1993
This paper states that college radio invokes two ends of a language spectrum -- the clean language authorized for on-air use and the dirty language prohibited from such use, and that the interaction between the two produces "expositional obscenity," a catalytic form of discourse that invites the audience to render a judgment about…
Descriptors: Audience Response, College Students, Court Litigation, Discourse Communities