« Plastic People-Oh, Baby Now Youre Such A Drag | Main | Hydrogen Article at San Francisco Chronicle »
June 15, 2005
TV Alert: Morgan Spurlock's "30 Days"
[Blog for Iowa :: Main Page] A brief synopsis of the show was published in the Village Voice: 30 Days, a six-part television sequel to Super Size Me, warps the line between documentary and reality TV even further as it weaves through American culture.
Some slightly related from Technorati and Google.
[MT-berita] Perkara sebenar tentang McDonalds dan kanak-kanak: Tidak ingin berlebih-lebih, pakar pemasaran McDonalds M Lawrence Light - yang bertanggungjawab keatas kempen “Im lovin it” - mahu mengelilingi kehidupan remaja seluruh dunia dengan imej-imej McDonalds. “Light mahu menjadikan setiap benda yang ada sebagai satu iklan untuk McDonalds,” majalah Business Week menulis dalam edisi Julai 2004. Dia sedang berusaha agar kedai rantaian Oak Brook untuk membuka kedai pakaian agar kanak-kanak akan berjalan dengan baju T dengan logo Golden Arches, seperti mana yang terdapat pada Old Navy atau Disney.
[Blogs.indiewire.com] indieWIRE BLOGS > Morgan Spurlock: So, I did the View last week and it was hilarious. Now this week I've been making all the NYC rounds for the book: the Today Show doing an interview with Al Roker, the CBS Early Show with Hanna Storm and tons of radio and print interviews covering not only the book, but the TV show.
[Gadling.com] Cool or Lame: Morgan Spurlocks New Project - Gadling - www ...: His new show concept, to be aired on the FX channel will involve living some life-style for a month and filming the entire process. According to his blog, which gives a somewhat consistent update on his project, he and his fiancée Alexandra moved to Columbus, OH where they decided to live on minimum wage for one month. The idea being to show how hard it is to make it in the United States on the pltry sum of (what is it now?) $5.15 an hour.
[Annotatedtimes.blogrunner.com] blogrunner: The New York Times - Arts - Television Virtual Weblog: In her State Department role, Harrison has praised the work of the department's Office of Broadcasting Services, which in early 2002 began producing feature reports, some coordinated by the White House, that promoted the administration's arguments for the invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq. The reports were distributed free to domestic and international TV stations.
[E.kth.se] Strang's Blog: Morgan Spurlock has a point: As with every country we go to, there were people that wouldn't talk to me because McDonald's is their biggest sponsor. In Germany it was SAT 1 and PRO 7, the two biggest TV stations, here it ENEGRGY and Metro, one of the biggest radion stations and the daily paper. The power of this company is their money, and if they can have an impact on what you see and hear in the media, then you should really question what a truly powerful company is able to keep away from your brain.”
Reflected tags on Technorati: Blog, Lost, Talent, The Green Files
Posted at June 15, 2005 06:32 AM
Comments
Post a comment
Thanks for signing in, . Now you can comment. (sign out)
(If you haven't left a comment here before, you may need to be approved by the site owner before your comment will appear. Until then, it won't appear on the entry. Thanks for waiting.)