PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Is everybody laughing when racially charged comedy is viewed with multiple-race audiences?

Is everybody laughing when racially charged comedy is viewed with multiple-race audiences?
2015-06-03
(Press-News.org) New research finds that when viewing black-oriented entertainment television that evokes black stereotypes in its comedy, black audiences are more comfortable watching the programming among their black peers than among their white counterparts, and viewing conditions did not make any difference among whites. The study led by Omotayo Banjo, a University of Cincinnati assistant professor of communication, is published online in Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly and will appear in the fall issue of the print publication.

The article states that "The study examined the interaction between content and context, with an emphasis on viewership of a television comedy that pokes fun at and occasionally disparages black in-group members."

Participants were invited to watch an episode of "The Boondocks," a black-oriented comedy program based on a syndicated comedy strip by Aaron McGruder. The show is featured on Cartoon Network's late-night Adult Swim time period.

"The show holds controversial content that has implications for racism or racist ideas," says Banjo. "So, how do audiences of different races perceive that? If we've moved past race as an issue in the U.S., can we watch this kind of content that is meant to challenge our thinking or make us laugh about our racism? And can different races do that together and feel comfortable?"

The study focused solely on recruiting participants who reported being black/African American or white/Caucasian. The participants were interviewed about their feelings after watching the show with two other black audience members, and watching the show with two white audience members. The two co-viewing audience members were paid actors prepared by the researchers to take part with the viewer as the program got underway.

The episode of "The Boondocks" used in the study was titled "Return of the King" and is considered one of the series' most controversial episodes, centered on the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. awakening from a coma and discovering current black culture. The study examined several different variables in regard to audience enjoyment from a scale of 1 to 7, with 1 being not at all similar and 7 being very similar. The variables included:

Perceived similarity to the main characters, in terms of lifestyle, cultural background, appearance and basic values.

Identification with characters - Viewers were asked if they wanted to be like the main characters, or if they felt that they related to an ethnic group from which the viewer was a member.

Whether viewers felt excitement - Relaxed/stimulated; calm/excited; sluggish/frenzied; dull/jittery; sleepy/wide awake; not aroused/aroused.

Whether viewers felt absorbed in the show - The show held their attention; they felt like they were part of the show; they were caught up in the show; they enjoyed watching the show.

The study found that black participants reported more positive excitement, attitudes and absorption than whites when viewing the program. However, blacks reported more identification and perceived similarity when viewing with all-black audiences than viewing with white audience members.

Ultimately, the study found that black viewers had a more rewarding experience viewing the show than their white counterparts, and that black viewers reported greater similarity and identification with characters in black-oriented media when they were viewing with black audience members than when viewing with white audience members.

The paper states that findings revealed no effect of co-viewing on the white audience reactions.

"African Americans, because of their position in society, are much more sensitive to difference, and so we weren't surprised that we saw these outcomes," says Banjo.

"It is possible that both black and white participants' responses were influenced by sanctions or other social expectations," write the authors.

The article also states that while an overwhelming amount of research on co-viewing influence has focused on family viewing habits, research on co-viewing programs with friends or with strangers is rare.

A total of 112 people took part in the study - 53 African Americans and 59 white participants. The average age of participants was 21. Sixty-eight percent of the participants were female and 32 percent were male.

INFORMATION:

Contributing authors on the study included Osei Appiah and Zheng Joyce Wang, associate professors of communication at The Ohio State University; Christopher Brown, assistant professor of communication studies at Minnesota State University; and Whitney Walther, a graduate student in journalism and mass communication at the University of Minnesota. The research was supported by funding from the UC and The Ohio State University departments of communication.

UC's researchers in the Department of Communication, McMicken College of Arts and Sciences (A&S), share a distinctive focus on contemporary social issues, including the understanding of voice, identity, public participation, and advocacy/leadership across communication domains including interpersonal, political, organizational, rhetorical, environmental, health and mediated communication.

Banjo's research focuses on representation and audience responses to racial and cultural media, as well as the impact of media messages on an individual's perception of self and of others.

Established in 1924, Journalism & Mass Communication Quarterly (JMCQ) is the flagship journal of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication (AEJMC). The AEJMC is a nonprofit, educational association of journalism and mass communication educators, students and media professionals. The association is dedicated to promoting the highest standards for journalism and mass communication education, to cultivate the widest possible range of communication research, to encourage the implementation of a multi-cultural society in the classroom and curriculum, and to defend and maintain freedom of communication in an effort to achieve better professional practice and a better informed public.


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Is everybody laughing when racially charged comedy is viewed with multiple-race audiences?

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Past failures pave way for promising new Alzheimer's treatments

2015-06-03
Since 2002, close to 300 drug candidates to treat Alzheimer's have run into clinical dead ends. But now, having learned from those failures, researchers are testing -- and retesting -- a batch of the most promising compounds designed to slow the disease's progression. An article in Chemical & Engineering News, the weekly newsmagazine of the American Chemical Society, describes what made this possible and what lies ahead. Lisa M. Jarvis, a senior correspondent at C&EN, reports that just a few years ago, Alzheimer's research suffered from several high-profile setbacks. ...

Antibody fragments expand what PET imaging can 'see' in mice (video)

2015-06-03
To visualize cancer throughout the body, physicians often turn to positron emission tomography (PET), which lights up areas that are metabolically active or growing, like tumors. Today in ACS Central Science, researchers report development of new PET probes composed of labeled antibody fragments that were tested in mice. These probes could someday be used to create targeted probes, giving doctors more information about tumors and how to treat them. The most common PET imaging probe is a labeled sugar molecule called 18F-2-deoxyfluoroglucose (FDG). PET indicates those ...

Increased risks in pregnancy for obese mothers and their babies, says study

2015-06-03
Women with obesity have a range of increased health risks in pregnancy, both for them and their babies, compared with those in the healthy weight category, according to a new systematic review of research by academics at the School of Nursing and Midwifery, Trinity College Dublin, the University of Gothenberg, and City University London. The paper, which was published today in the international peer-reviewed journal Obesity Reviews, recommends women with obesity should lose weight before they become pregnant, and also highlights the current lack of support available ...

Recovering a rare metal from LCDs to avoid depleting key resource

2015-06-03
Life without bright screens on our smart phones and TVs is hard to imagine. But in 20 years, one of the essential components of the liquid-crystal displays, or LCDs, that make many of our gadgets possible could disappear. To address the potential shortage of this component -- the element indium -- scientists report in the journal ACS Sustainable Chemistry & Engineering a new way to recover the valuable metal so it could be recycled. Many consumer electronics from laptops to tablets contain thin films of indium tin-oxide that act as transparent conductive coatings in ...

How did the chicken cross the road...safely?

2015-06-03
Montreal, June 3, 2015 -- For many, summer holidays mean hitting the highway -- but nothing puts a damper on a road trip like an accidental collision with a deer. For Jochen Jaeger, a professor in Concordia University's Department of Geography, Planning and Environment, improving roadkill prevention is best approached through experimentation. In a study recently published in the Journal of Environmental Management, Jaeger and a group of co-authors from international universities show that protecting animals from speeding vehicles doesn't have a one-size-fits-all solution. ...

Helping robots handle uncertainty

2015-06-03
Decentralized partially observable Markov decision processes are a way to model autonomous robots' behavior in circumstances where neither their communication with each other nor their judgments about the outside world are perfect. The problem with Dec-POMDPs (as they're abbreviated) is that they're as complicated as their name. They provide the most rigorous mathematical models of multiagent systems -- not just robots, but any autonomous networked devices --under uncertainty. But for all but the simplest cases, they've been prohibitively time-consuming to solve. Last ...

How a box jellyfish catches fish

2015-06-03
The first feeding study of tropical Australia's Irukandji box jellyfish has found that they actively fish. They attract larval fish by twitching their extended tentacles, highlighting their nematocyst clusters (stinging structures) and using them as lures. It's an impressive feat by any standards, but particularly so for an animal that doesn't have a defined brain. The laboratory-based study of Carukia barnesi, the tiny but deadly Irukandji jellyfish, was conducted at James Cook University (JCU) in Cairns, Australia, and has been published in the online journal PLOS ONE. ...

Cyberbullying less emotionally harmful to kids than traditional in-person harassment, study finds

2015-06-03
WASHINGTON - Contrary to popular belief, cyberbullying that starts and stays online is no more emotionally harmful to youngsters than harassment that only occurs in-person and may actually be less disturbing because it's likelier to be of shorter duration and not involve significant power imbalances, according to a study published by the American Psychological Association. Researchers at the University of New Hampshire analyzed data from the Technology Harassment Victimization Study, funded by the National Institute of Justice. They focused on telephone interviews conducted ...

Arterial thrombosis: Cloaking of collagen frees up the flow

2015-06-03
Blood clots often form when lipid-rich plaques on the inner surface of arteries rupture and platelets aggregate at the site of injury. Cardiologists from Ludwig-Maximilians-Universitaet (LMU) in Munich have now compared the effects of two new platelet aggregation inhibitors. Blood clots that form in arteries - so-called arterial thrombosis -are among the most common causes of heart attack and stroke. They are particularly prone to develop when 'atherosclerotic plaques', fatty deposits that build up within the inner lining of major arteries, fracture and break. Circulating ...

New treatment for polycystic kidney disease

2015-06-03
Published in the Journal of the American Society of Nephrology, the treatment, which involves targeting tiny blood and lymphatic vessels inside the kidneys, is shown to improve renal function and slow progression of disease in mice. Polycystic kidney disease (PKD) is a genetic disorder where fluid filled cysts grow in kidneys and destroy normal renal tissue. It is the world's most common inherited kidney disease, affecting between 1 in 400 and 1 in 1000 people worldwide - around 12.5 million individuals. A rarer form of the disease, which occurs in about one in every ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Scientists track evolution of pumice rafts after 2021 underwater eruption in Japan

The future of geothermal for reliable clean energy

Study shows end-of-life cancer care lacking for Medicare patients

Scented wax melts may not be as safe for indoor air as initially thought, study finds

Underwater mics and machine learning aid right whale conservation

Solving the case of the missing platinum

Glass fertilizer beads could be a sustained nutrient delivery system

Biobased lignin gels offer sustainable alternative for hair conditioning

Perovskite solar cells: Thermal stresses are the key to long-term stability

University of Houston professors named senior members of the National Academy of Inventors

Unraveling the mystery of the missing blue whale calves

UTA partnership boosts biomanufacturing in North Texas

Kennesaw State researcher earns American Heart Association award for innovative study on heart disease diagnostics

Self-imaging of structured light in new dimensions

Study highlights successes of Virginia’s oyster restoration efforts

Optimism can encourage healthy habits

Precision therapy with microbubbles

LLM-based web application scanner recognizes tasks and workflows

Pattern of compounds in blood may indicate severity of gestational hypertension and preeclampsia

How does innovation policy respond to the challenges of a changing world?

What happens when a diet targets ultra-processed foods?

University of Vaasa, Finland, conducts research on utilizing buildings as energy sources

Stealth virus: Zika virus builds tunnels to covertly infect cells of the placenta

The rising tide of sand mining: a growing threat to marine life

Contemporary patterns of end-of-life care among Medicare beneficiaries with advanced cancer

Digital screen time and nearsightedness

Postoperative weight loss after anti-obesity medications and revision risk after joint replacement

New ACS research finds low uptake of supportive care at the end-of-life for patients with advanced cancer

New frailty measurement tool could help identify vulnerable older adults in epic

Co-prescribed stimulants, opioids linked to higher opioid doses

[Press-News.org] Is everybody laughing when racially charged comedy is viewed with multiple-race audiences?