The Cosby Show: Audiences, Impact, and Implications

Praeger
The Cosby Show: Audiences, Impact, and Implications

This volume chronicles the phenomenon of a television programme that has commanded first place since its premier in September 1984. Each week in the United States it has consistently drawn a loyal audience of more than 60 million people, breaking all records for ratings and shares. The show is credited with lifting a third-place network into commanding leadership, advancing the image of black families, being the object of the greatest syndication barter deal in history, and regenerating the sitcom genre. Approached from a systems-theoretical perspective, this book considers "The Cosby Show" historically, economically, politically, legally, and socioculturally. The book provides detailed examination of the show's production, audience profiles, and international reviews and reactions to it. Fuller includes the results of a survey conducted by her and translated into appropriate languages for more than 800 responses from a dozen countries. Media scholars continue to call for future research on acculturation effects of television and for research on complete contextual studies of specific television genres. "The Cosby Show: Audiences, Impact and Implications" attempts to fill those gaps.