Description |
1 online resource (1 video file, 45 min.) |
Summary |
Exposing the invisible - but all-pervasive - public relations industry, Toxic Sludge Is Good for You helps viewers understand the tools PR professionals use to shape public opinion. Naomi Klein, acclaimed journalist and author of the best-selling book No Logo, examines the rise of international branding and the grassroots anti-corporate campaigns it has inspired. She asks viewers to consider the costs of globalization, including the disappearance of public space, consumer choice, and stable, meaningful work. This engaging film reveals how much of what the public sees as factual, unbiased news and information has its origins in corporate boardrooms. Featuring interviews with John Stauber, of PR Watch and cultural theorists Stuart Ewen and Mark Crispin Miller |
Credits |
Editor, Jeremy Smith |
Performer |
Narrator: Amy Goodman |
Event |
Originally produced by Media Education Foundation in 2002 |
Audience |
Grade 9+ |
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Higher education |
In |
Media Education Foundation Collection |
Subject |
Communication.
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Corporations -- Corrupt practices -- United States
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Corporations -- Public relations -- United States
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Industrial publicity -- Corrupt practices -- United States
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Public relations firms -- Corrupt practices -- United States
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Communication.
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Corporations -- Corrupt practices.
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Corporations -- Public relations.
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Public relations firms -- Corrupt practices.
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United States.
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Genre/Form |
Documentary films.
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Documentary films.
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Documentaires.
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Form |
Streaming video
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Author |
Alper, Loretta.
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Garner, Kelly
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Goodman, Amy, 1957-
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Jhally, Sut.
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Robb, Margo.
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Smith, Jeremy, 1972-
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