3.03: The Supreme Court Court tv is just a camera in a courtroom, you in your living room, and nothing in Brill leans over from behind his desk and gives my hand a manly shake. http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/3.03/brill_pr.html
Extractions: TV sucks, but you can't blame the box. As a piece of hardware, it's sophisticated, efficient, easy to use. It rarely crashes. It's cheap. When you switch it on, it doesn't make Bill Gates any richer (not yet, anyway). It's capable of receiving a beautiful clear picture from anywhere in the world. Install a camera in Red Square, point a dish at the stars, and in an instant, 100 million people can have Russian tanks rolling into their living rooms. TV takes you places with the most powerful vehicle technology has yet built: pure image, pure picture. Of course, it rarely works that way. Since television started proliferating across the earth in the '50s, programmers have thrown more and more stuff between you and the picture. We now have razzle-dazzle graphics and witty commentary and million-dollar anchors and intrepid correspondents and ads for Saabs and hemorrhoid ointments and breakfast cereals and an endless parade of bozos blathering on and on. There have been moments of great clarity and power: The McCarthy hearings. The moon landing. The Persian Gulf war. O.J. in the white Bronco. But in general, TV has moved away from the simple notion of pointing a camera at the world and showing it to you. Along the way, we have forgotten what a great journalistic tool TV is, with its tremendous power and immediacy.
Doing Justice During Wartime - Policy Review, No. 111 The narrow legalistic debate has failed so far to do justice to the magnitude Fourth, extensive use of domestic courts may significantly undermine the http://www.policyreview.org/feb02/sofaer.html
Extractions: By Abraham D. Sofaer and Paul R. Williams (Go to Print Friendly Version) n november 13, 2001, Criminals v . enemies he current debate , when al Qaeda struck American targets, including the World Trade Center (in fbi President Bush put all that behind him after the attacks of September Taking his cue from this major shift in policy, Attorney General John Ashcroft, along with fbi Director Robert S. Mueller III, issued instructions to their personnel to implement a corresponding shift in focus, away from the investigation of terrorism as crimes and the preparation of criminal cases to the overriding objective of preventing terrorist attacks. ( cia to men. A successful military engagement was certain to result in the capture and potential trial of hundreds, perhaps thousands, of individuals. The military commission was a mechanism far more suitable to meet this need than the full-blown trials used to prosecute conventional crimes in the federal courts. Unlike the executive branch departments, the judicial system cannot rapidly retool or evolve to accommodate the new needs of terror war. The American domestic criminal system was designed primarily to protect civil liberties while effectively prosecuting those responsible for murder and other domestic crimes. The system was never intended or designed to perform the judicial roles related to terror war or for that matter to prevent fundamentalist terrorism. The creation of military commissions is thus an effort by the Bush administration to provide a method for trying non-citizen terrorists that corresponds to the shift from fighting terrorism with conventional law enforcement to serious foreign military engagement.
TVE: Human Rights Catalogue '98 There is often debate about recording victims on video is it The answerdepends on who is behind the video camera - their sensitivity to the subject, http://www.tve.org/humanrights/doc.cfm?aid=371
Extractions: No 100 August 2001 Editorial Graeme Turner ANZCA News Marsha Durham New Television Formats New television formats Jane Roscoe and Gay Hawkins Real entertainment: New factual hybrid television Jane Roscoe Judge TV: Documentary form and governance Gareth Palmer Old dogs, new tricks: Beyond Simpson Le Mesurier, crime-comedy and the telemovie series Sue Turnbull and Felicity Collins More than TV: Channel Ten and diversity in free-to-air broadcasting Joshua Green Digitising dinosaurs Morgan Richards Webcam sites: The documentary genre moves online? Craig Hight Online interview ABC TV online, digitally yours Gay Hawkins interviews Molly Reynolds Comment Real new formats of television: Looking at Big Brother Phillip Bell Court on camera: Television coverage of Australian legal proceedings Jane Johnston Representing decline: The role of the arts in framing discourses of deindustrialisation Deborah Stevenson and Georgia Paton 'Subliminal charge': How Hindi-language newspaper expansion affects India Peter Friedlander, Robin Jeffrey and Sanjay Seth
EarthCam - EarthCam News Verizon to use Microsoft Tech for Mobile tv (www.devshed.com) Two out ofthree current camera phone owners use the camera function on a regular basis to http://www.earthcam.com/news/archives.php?page=28
When George Meets John behind it were two other achievements, less obvious but also important. His tone was more appropriate to a tv debate (Kerry was understated and almost http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/200407/fallows
Extractions: What capacities does President Bush bring to his decision-making? What limitations hamper his judgment? The author, a journalist and a historian, speaks with people close to the President and probes his private life and public career. By Richard Brookhiser. More on campaigns and candidates from The Atlantic Monthly
Closed-circuit Television - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia The use of CCTVs in public places has increased, causing debate over security The use of CCTV surveillance cameras monitoring public spaces has become http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Closed-circuit_television
Extractions: The two-year-old Jamie Bulger being led away by his killers, recorded on shopping centre CCTV. Closed-circuit television CCTV ), as a collection of surveillance cameras doing video surveillance , is the use of television cameras for surveillance . It differs from broadcast television in that all components are directly linked via cables or other direct means. CCTV is used in banks casinos , shopping centres, streets, airports etc. (the eye in the sky ). The use of CCTVs in public places has increased, causing debate over security vs. privacy Closed Circuit TV (CCTV) - where the picture is viewed or recorded, but not broadcast - was initially developed as a means of security for banks. Today it has developed to the point where it is simple and inexpensive enough to be used in home security systems, and for everyday surveillance. Privacy ... edit The use of CCTV surveillance cameras monitoring public spaces has become common in the 21st century edit Closed-circuit cameras are often used to discourage crime In the United Kingdom , initial experiments in the and (including outdoor CCTV being installed in Bournemouth in ), led to in several larger trial programs in the early
Closed-circuit Television - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia The use of CCTVs in public places has increased, causing debate over security Modern CCTV cameras use small high definition colour cameras that can not http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Security_camera
Extractions: (Redirected from Security camera The two-year-old Jamie Bulger being led away by his killers, recorded on shopping centre CCTV. Closed-circuit television CCTV ), as a collection of surveillance cameras doing video surveillance , is the use of television cameras for surveillance . It differs from broadcast television in that all components are directly linked via cables or other direct means. CCTV is used in banks casinos , shopping centres, streets, airports etc. (the eye in the sky ). The use of CCTVs in public places has increased, causing debate over security vs. privacy Closed Circuit TV (CCTV) - where the picture is viewed or recorded, but not broadcast - was initially developed as a means of security for banks. Today it has developed to the point where it is simple and inexpensive enough to be used in home security systems, and for everyday surveillance. Privacy ... edit The use of CCTV surveillance cameras monitoring public spaces has become common in the 21st century edit Closed-circuit cameras are often used to discourage crime In the United Kingdom , initial experiments in the and (including outdoor CCTV being installed in Bournemouth in ), led to in several larger trial programs in the early
The Court Is Open For Discussion (washingtonpost.com) spectators lucky enough to get in, because the court bars tv cameras. The court has made use of foreign legal opinion to bolster its rulings in two http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A7884-2005Jan13.html
Extractions: var SA_Message="SACategory=" + thisNode; Hello Edit Profile Sign Out Sign In Register Now ... Subscribe to SEARCH: News Web var ie = document.getElementById?true:false; ie ? formSize=27 : formSize=24 ; document.write(''); Top 20 E-mailed Articles washingtonpost.com Nation Courts ... E-Mail This Article Top News Supreme Court What is RSS? All RSS Feeds By Charles Lane Washington Post Staff Writer Friday, January 14, 2005; Page A01 Leaning forward pugnaciously in his yellow armchair, Justice Antonin Scalia declared his eternal resistance to the arguments of his liberal colleague on the Supreme Court, Justice Stephen G. Breyer. "He will never convert me," Scalia declared not that anyone familiar with his conservative record on the court ever doubted that. Justice Antonin Scalia answers a question while Justice Stephen Breyer looks on during a conversation on the relevance of Foreign Law for American Constitutional Adjudication at American University Washington College of Law. (Photos by Lucian Perkins - The Washington Post)
Television: Definition And Much More From Answers.com Today s solidstate television cameras use semiconductor charge-coupled devices Some of this debate stems from the fact that while Farnsworth appears to http://www.answers.com/topic/television
CPD: 2004 Debate Transcript Commission on Presidential debates September 30, 2004 debate transcript. Here they re leaving the skies and the environment behind. http://www.debates.org/pages/trans2004c.html
Extractions: GIBSON: Good evening from the Field House at Washington University in St. Louis. I'm Charles Gibson of ABC News and "Good Morning America." I welcome you to the second of the 2004 presidential debates between President George W. Bush, the Republican nominee, and Senator John Kerry, the Democratic nominee. The debates are sponsored by the Commission on Presidential Debates. Tonight's format is going to be a bit different. We have assembled a town-hall meeting. We're in the Show-Me State, as everyone knows Missouri to be, so Missouri residents will ask the questions. These 140 citizens were identified by the Gallup Organization as not yet committed in this election.
CNN.com - Transcript Part I: Candidates Tackle Iraq - Oct 8, 2004 The following is a transcript of the debate between President George W. Bush He can t come here and tell you that he s left no child behind because he http://www.cnn.com/2004/ALLPOLITICS/10/08/debate.transcript/
Extractions: International Edition MEMBER SERVICES The Web CNN.com Home Page World U.S. Weather ... Autos SERVICES Video E-mail Newsletters Your E-mail Alerts RSS ... Contact Us SEARCH Web CNN.com var clickExpire = "-1"; Sen. John Kerry and President George W. Bush TRANSCRIPT Full transcript of the October 8, 2004 presidential debates. Senator Kerry, Are you wishy washy? Mr. President, do you sincerely believe you had a reasonable justification for invading Iraq? Senator Kerry, would you have a different plan than the president for Iraq? President Bush, what is your plan to repair diplomatic relations with other countries? ... President Bush, how will you maintain our military strength without a draft? PUNDITS' DEBATE BLOGS Paul Begala's debate blog Bob Novak's debate blog Jessi Klein's debate blog All-in-One Debate Blog RELATED CNN survey: Bush maintains Electoral College lead
Media Law Prof Blog: June 20, 2005 - June 26, 2005 New York s Highest Court Decides Against Court tv in Cameras in the Courtroom Case Pay some attention to the people behind the curtain and enjoy this http://lawprofessors.typepad.com/media_law_prof_blog/2005/week25/
Extractions: Main In a 7-4 decision, the majority opinion written by Judge Easterbrook, the 7th Circuit has found in favor of appellant Patricia Carter and Governors State University, and against the student journalists who objected when, in 2001, Dean Carter told the student newspaper's printer to hold any issues she had not okayed in advance. The students objected that her actions violated their right to free speech and sued both her and the university. With Hazelwood v. Kuhlmeier as its starting point, the 7th Circuit first tried to establish whether the university had intended to establish a public forum. After much discussion of the question, the court finally summed up the issue thus: "Because the district court acted on a motion for summary judgment, it assumed (as do we) that plaintiffs' perspective is the correct one. On that understanding, the Board established the Innovator in a designated public forum, where the editors were empowered to make their own decisions, wise or foolish, without fear that the administration would stop the presses."
Corporate Public-Interest Groups Don T Be Deceived By Ethical Published on Monday, February 21, 2000 in the Boulder camera More recentlythe pharmaceutical industry, hidden behind the names Citizens for Better http://www.commondreams.org/views/022100-104.htm
Extractions: Don't Be Deceived By Ethical-Sounding Names by Harv Teitelbaum Many people complain that it's getting harder to tell right from wrong, truth from fiction, and reality from illusion in our society. Nowhere is this confusion of values more apparent than in the manipulation of our perceptions of and by conservative and commercial "public-interest" groups. Since the 1960s, when America saw an unprecedented growth in grassroots, democratic, public-interest organizations such as the ACLU, Physicians for Social Responsibility, and the NAACP, commercial and conservative interests have been seeking ways to reclaim the moral high ground, or if not possible, to at least dilute the impact of these progressive organizations. As an initial attempt, commercial interests came up with the idea of creating in-house front groups to counter those grassroots organizations which arose to combat industrial threats. These corporate constructs were ridiculed and dismissed as "astroturf" groups in recognition of their artificial nature. But corporate and special interests have come a long way since then. First, industry groups and conservatives tapped their substantial financial advantage and the media's money-as-access attitude to monopolize the public dialogue on issues. Perhaps more importantly, since honest identification of the parties behind the message might negate or weaken that message, they concocted public-interest names that appeared progressive and grassroots. The task then, became one of marketing, and not simply of message.
American Bar Association - Criminal Justice Section - Criminal And television, through Court tv, provides coverage and commentary on The debate about recording criminal jury deliberations has yet to be resolved. http://www.abanet.org/crimjust/cjmag/19-1/ethics.html
Extractions: Clients, Lawyers, and the Media Peter A. Joy and Kevin C. McMunigal Peter A. Joy is a professor of law and director of the Criminal Justice Clinic at Washington University School of Law in St. Louis, Missouri. Kevin C. McMunigal is the Judge Ben C. Green Professor of Law at Case Western University School of Law in Cleveland, Ohio. Both are contributing editors to Criminal Justice magazine. Media scrutiny of criminal trials is commonplace. Newspapers give extensive attention to criminal trials of celebrities such as Martha Stewart and those, such as Scott Peterson, accused of terrible crimes. And television, through Court TV, provides coverage and commentary on criminal trials of even obscure defendants. The lawyer and the client have limited ability to control such coverage-whether in print media or on television-and it is usually limited to what an observer sitting in the courtroom would see. The Constitution requires public criminal trials, and newspapers and television cameras extend public access to open courtroom proceedings beyond the relatively small number of spectators a typical courtroom holds. Two recent cases, though, demonstrate that television may be poised to expand the scope and intrusiveness of its coverage of criminal trials raising challenging questions of legal ethics.
TBS 13 First and foremost, I do not use the term the state to refer to a unitary actor . previously conducted behind the scenes away from television cameras. http://www.tbsjournal.com/sakr.html
Extractions: It might be supposed that Arab satellite broadcasting also represents a space where conflict is acted out. But there is an imbalance between the status of state actors, who have a real existence and an authority embedded in law, and that of the increasing number of non-state actors who occupy the virtual space of broadcasting, where they remain subject to the coercive apparatus of the state. It should also be noted that a large number of Arab satellite broadcasters are either state institutions themselves or are closely aligned with, linked to, or controlled by state actors. Keeping these links in mind can help illuminate apparent contradictions between the policies of different sets of state actors.
Untitled Document Examples have already emerged from our debate so far of how different state were previously conducted behind the scenes away from television cameras. http://www.tbsjournal.com/printerfriendly/sakrPF.html
Extractions: It might be supposed that Arab satellite broadcasting also represents a space where conflict is acted out. But there is an imbalance between the status of state actors, who have a real existence and an authority embedded in law, and that of the increasing number of non-state actors who occupy the virtual space of broadcasting, where they remain subject to the coercive apparatus of the state. It should also be noted that a large number of Arab satellite broadcasters are either state institutions themselves or are closely aligned with, linked to, or controlled by state actors. Keeping these links in mind can help illuminate apparent contradictions between the policies of different sets of state actors. Contradictions have likewise been seen in Jordanian media policy. The royal court and the office of the Prime Minister sparred over a long period up to 2003 about what should happen to the Jordanian Ministry of Information. Their disagreement showed that coherent intentions or objectives cannot plausibly be ascribed to states. If we bear this in mind when studying satellite broadcasting we get a better sense of how state actors and broadcasters may be intertwined in ownership terms, or intertwined in terms of sharing some objectives and not others. Thus is it possible that stimuli for change may emerge through the programmes of a particular broadcasting institution as an unintended consequence of the objectives of certain state actors or institutions.
[ TV T A T T L E . C O M ] Mo Rocca will be gone when the Court tv series returns Tuesday This time, saysThe Smoking Gun The debate rages on Who really created the tv Dinner? http://www.tvtattle.com/
Extractions: As part of Deleese Williams' promised "Cinderella-like" makeover, producers coaxed her sister, Kellie, into trashing her appearance on videotape. But after the makeover was canceled at the last-minute, the sister became so guilt-ridden that she took her life, according to a lawsuit filed against ABC. "Kellie could not live with the fact that she had said horrible things that hurt her sister," says the attorney for Deleese Williams. "She fell to pieces. Four months later, she ended her life with an overdose of pills, alcohol and cocaine ... This family is shredded. There is a human cost to this." They are the people who, on their own, talk up TV shows at work, at parties or at the gym. They are "super fans." "This year more than ever before, (network) campaigns have been aimed at 'super fans' a chatty, peer-influencing group that networks believe can help them win the ratings wars," reports the LA Times. "They are the fuse that lights the firecracker, and really sets things on fire," says the WB's Lewis Goldstein. // PLUS:
{ Xeni.net } Screeching gears and grinding metal are a new staple of tv on shows such as While companies are set to use these radio frequency identification tags to http://www.xeni.net/clips-bcast.php
Extractions: and Shaq Online archives: broadcast Interviewing Survival Research Laboratories ( SRL ) founder and director Mark Pauline, at April 2005 SRL performance in Los Angeles. Image: Scott Beale / Laughing Squid NPR "Day to Day" Techies Find Solutions to Gulf Coast's Telecom Woes . Hurricane Katrina devastated communications systems throughout the Gulf Coast everything from land lines to cell phones to Internet access. Now tech industry volunteers are helping the government fix the problem. Sep., 2005