Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
Articles 1 - 12 of 12
Full-Text Articles in Arts and Humanities
Swinging Bridge - December 10, 2009, Michelle Canales
Swinging Bridge - December 10, 2009, Michelle Canales
Student Newspapers & Magazines
No abstract provided.
Swinging Bridge - November 19, 2009, Tim Mackie
Swinging Bridge - November 19, 2009, Tim Mackie
Student Newspapers & Magazines
No abstract provided.
Swinging Bridge - November 5, 2009, Tim Mackie
Swinging Bridge - November 5, 2009, Tim Mackie
Student Newspapers & Magazines
No abstract provided.
Swinging Bridge - October 15, 2009, Tim Mackie
Swinging Bridge - October 15, 2009, Tim Mackie
Student Newspapers & Magazines
No abstract provided.
Swinging Bridge - October 1, 2009, Tim Mackie
Swinging Bridge - October 1, 2009, Tim Mackie
Student Newspapers & Magazines
No abstract provided.
Swinging Bridge - September 17, 2009, Tim Mackie
Swinging Bridge - September 17, 2009, Tim Mackie
Student Newspapers & Magazines
No abstract provided.
Swinging Bridge - April 30, 2009, Alison Stratton
Swinging Bridge - April 30, 2009, Alison Stratton
Student Newspapers & Magazines
No abstract provided.
Swinging Bridge - April 16, 2009, Alison Stratton
Swinging Bridge - April 16, 2009, Alison Stratton
Student Newspapers & Magazines
No abstract provided.
Swinging Bridge - April 2, 2009, Alison Stratton
Swinging Bridge - April 2, 2009, Alison Stratton
Student Newspapers & Magazines
No abstract provided.
Swinging Bridge - March 12, 2009, Alison Stratton
Swinging Bridge - March 12, 2009, Alison Stratton
Student Newspapers & Magazines
No abstract provided.
Swinging Bridge - February 26, 2009, Alison Stratton
Swinging Bridge - February 26, 2009, Alison Stratton
Student Newspapers & Magazines
No abstract provided.
“Weekend Update” And The Tradition Of New Journalism, Paul Achter
“Weekend Update” And The Tradition Of New Journalism, Paul Achter
Rhetoric and Communication Studies Faculty Publications
“Weekend Update,” like much of SNL, saw itself as a show talking back to the media, as “television’s antidote to television, to all the bad things–corrupt, artificial, plastic, facile–that TV entertainment had become.”3 The show sought this influence in a period of heavily publicized official corruption: it’s not a coincidence that the segment, which Chevy Chase hosted on SNL’s first show, debuted on the heels of Nixon’s resignation over Watergate and Johnson’s lies about Vietnam. These abuses of power led not only to widespread disappointment with Washington politics and politicians, but to a kind of skepticism about journalism and …