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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Robert E. Bartholomew , Benjamin RadfordPublisher: McFarland & Co Inc Imprint: McFarland & Co Inc Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.30cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.340kg ISBN: 9780786464982ISBN 10: 0786464984 Pages: 254 Publication Date: 02 November 2011 Recommended Age: From 18 years Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Awaiting stock The supplier is currently out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out for you. Table of ContentsTable of Contents Preface Section One : It Came from the Airwaves—Radio 1. The London Riot Hoax 2. Radio Daze—The Martian Invasion Broadcast 3. The Martians Return 4. Infamous Disc Jockey Hoaxes 5. Playing with Fire: Nuclear Scares Section Two : It Came from the Small Screen—Television 6. “This Just In...” NBC Frightens Viewers 7. “Look! Up in the Sky!” Asteroid Panic 8. Pokémon Panics and Creepy Crawley Scares 9. The “Documentary” That Fooled England 10. Hurricane Katrina Mythmaking 11. Chicken Little and the Bird Flu Panic 12. The Russians Are Coming! 13. The Video Nasties Scare (Peter Hassall) Section Three : It Came from Ink—Newspapers 14. The Batmen on the Moon Hoax 15. The Central Park Zoo Panic 16. The Halley’s Comet Scare of 1910 17. How the Press Created an Imaginary Terrorist 18. The Hook Hoax 19. The Ghost Slasher of Taiwan 20. The Phantom Clown Panic Section Four : It Came from Cyberspace—The Internet 21. Chemtrails and Conspiracies 22. Morgellons: The First Internet Disease? 23. Katrina Evacuee Myths 24. The E-mail Virus Panic (Bill Ellis) Section Five : It Came from a Friend of a Friend—Media-Spread Urban Legends 25. Urban Legends and the Media 26. The Curse of the Crying Boy (David Clarke) 27. Photos of the Gods (David Clarke) Section Six : It Came from Everywhere 28. The Satanic Cult Scare 29. Halloween Panics 30. Stranger Danger and the Predator Next Door 31. The School Safety Panic 32. “Out of the Water!” Media Shark Frenzy 33. The Great Puerto Rican Chupacabra Panic 34. YouTube, Popcorn and the Killer Cell Phones 35. Someone Stole My Kidney! Organ Theft Scares 36. Killer Vaccines (Felicity Goodyear-Smith and Helen Petousis-Harris) Notes Bibliography IndexReviewsfascinating...ground breaking and unique...definitely a rare find and worthy of any conspiracy enthusiasts library or paranormal journeymen's book shelf...recommend --<i>Examiner.com</i>; Bartholomew continues to reinvent the way in which these topics are presented and discussed. This makes a great reference for researchers and those following mass panics --<i>Fortean Times</i>; highly recommend[ed]...an important resource for any skeptic's library and an entertaining read for anyone --<i>Skeptical Inquirer</i>; in this work Bartholomew and Radford, investigate the truth behind scares fueled either intentionally or accidentally by the media --<i>Reference & Research Book News</i>. "...surveys a wide breadth of social panics and scares that were fueled by the mass media..."" —The Skeptic's Dictionary Newsletter ""...a must get for everyone interested in popular culture and why people believe and vehemently react to stories we hear on television, radio, our neighbors and, now, the internet."" —Doubtful Newsblog" fascinating...ground breaking and unique...definitely a rare find and worthy of any conspiracy enthusiasts library or paranormal journeymen's book shelf...recommend --Examiner.com; Bartholomew continues to reinvent the way in which these topics are presented and discussed. This makes a great reference for researchers and those following mass panics --Fortean Times; highly recommend[ed]...an important resource for any skeptic's library and an entertaining read for anyone --Skeptical Inquirer; in this work Bartholomew and Radford, investigate the truth behind scares fueled either intentionally or accidentally by the media --Reference & Research Book News. Author InformationRobert E. Bartholomew has taught sociology in Australia at The Flinders University of South Australia and James Cook University in Queensland. A former broadcast journalist and contributor to news organizations such as the Associated Press and United Press International, he currently teaches at Botany College in Auckland, New Zealand. Benjamin Radford is deputy editor of the science magazine The Skeptical Inquirer. The author of a dozen books and numerous articles on urban legends, the paranormal, critical thinking, films, and media literacy. He has appeared on CNN, the History Channel, and the National Geographic Channel. He lives in Corrales, New Mexico. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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