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Media Scandals: Morality and Desire in the Popular Culture Marketplace

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When personal desire goes beyond moral boundaries in the lives of public figures, a media scandal may not be far behind. But media today can make anyone with the right story a subject for scandal. The media routinely invades privacy in search of a scandal, turning secrets into narratives that ignite widespread attention. The media scandal has become a cornerstone of contemporary journalism, and a controversial trend in media performance overall.


This is the first volume to evaluate scandal as a mass-mediated, globalized phenomenon. Top scholars examine how institutions and personalities ranging from politics, religion and big business to TV talkshows, sports, and popular music, become converted into scandalous commodities that drive tabloids, trash TV and "respectable" media too. By exploring how scandals fuel mass media and popular culture, this timely book will stimulate much discussion about this fascinating subject.


This will be essential reading for students and scholars in media studies, cultural studies, journalism/mass communication, communication studies and sociology.

259 pages, Hardcover

First published November 27, 1997

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James Lull

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Author 8 books4 followers
July 14, 2010
I read this in college, for my minor in rhetoric/communication studies, and I *loved* it. I don't remember many of the fine points of the book, but it was an excellent resource into how the media creates narratives out of celebrities' lives. A fantastic book for anyone interested in the media and the media's storytelling.
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