You are what you watch How movies and TV affect everything

Walt Hickey

Book - 2023

Pulitzer Prize-winning author Walt Hickey explores exactly how this thing we blithely call "entertainment" has such a tremendous effect on us. Through compelling reporting and research and the creation of dozens and dozens of colorful data visuals, Hickey shows how something like a movie or TV show not only has a direct physical effect on the viewer--how the chemistry of our breath changes with a movie's ups and downs, or a scary scene can be literally bloodcurdling--but also has a measurable impact on society, politics, the economy, and even the future.

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2nd Floor New Shelf 302.234/Hickey (NEW SHELF) Due Nov 30, 2024
  • Introduction
  • Chapter 1. How Culture Affects Our Bodies
  • Chapter 2. How Culture Captures Us
  • Chapter 3. How Culture Reflects Us
  • Chapter 4. How Culture Changes Us
  • Chapter 5. Commerce & Culture & Commerce
  • Chapter 6. How Culture Fuels Empires
  • Chapter 7. How Culture Survives
  • Chapter 8. What Stories Do to their Creators
  • Sources
  • Index
  • Acknowledgments
  • Photo Credits
Review by Booklist Review

A self-described "data journalist," Hickey is also a passionate fan eager to delight in his favorite spheres of pop culture. Rather than disparaging or dismissing mass media, he offers an unconventional view by highlighting its significant, positive contributions to modern life and citing the biological and social human imperatives that can be fulfilled through what are often labeled as diversions. Hickey emphasizes that media's influence is exploding due to increasingly rapid and global delivery methods. Today's technology, he states, provides instantaneous transmission, saturation, and feedback on an unprecedented scale. Hickey's argument is cogent, original, and couched informally, with palpable enthusiasm. He enlivens his research with witty opinions, amusing digressions, and arresting visuals. Hickey's data does veer occasionally into the arcane, and the accompanying graphics by Heather Jones are fun, if mostly overly detailed and elaborate. (The author admits, perhaps unsurprisingly, that his own preferences guided the project.) Hickey's lighthearted approach will prove especially enticing for fellow data heads and devotees of pop culture but may be limited in terms of general appeal.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In this penetrating debut, Hickey, winner of a Pulitzer Prize for illustrated reporting, deconstructs "how media and culture shapes us as individuals and collectively." Movies, he argues, have physiological effects on viewers that scientists are only beginning to understand, as revealed by a study that measured the chemical composition of the air in screenings of The Hunger Games: Catching Fire and found that levels of isoprene (a chemical humans release when muscles tense) spiked during key scenes. Examining the appeal of common genres and tropes, Hickey suggests that heist films tap into anxieties about "who deserves what, and whether the small and weak deserve what the strong have." He also studies the social effects of movies, noting that the popularity of collies skyrocketed after the release of the 1943 film Lassie Come Home, as did New Zealand tourism after Peter Jackson's The Lord of the Rings movies. The trivia surprises and the bounty of colorful charts and graphs visualizing, for instance, the traits Spider-Man shares with each of his villains and the explosion of "Hallelujah" covers after the 2001 release of Shrek (which featured a version of the Leonard Cohen song on its soundtrack), offer fun insight into popular culture. This is a blast. Photos. (Oct.)

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