# four arguments for the elimination of television ![[fourargumentsfortheeliminationoftelevision0.jpg|300]] first edition (publ. william morrow) four arguments for the elimination of television is a 1978 book by jerry mander "who argues that many of the problems with television are inherent in the medium and technology itself and thus cannot be reformed" mander was an advertiser for 15 years with five of them as a president and partner of freeman mander & gossage a san francisco advertising agency # background this is the first book that collects information from various sources to determine how the wide availability of television affects society. mander believes that "television and democratic society are incompatible" due to television removing all of society's senses except for seeing and hearing. the author states that television makes it so that people have no common sense which leads to as cornell university professor rose k. golden wrote for the journal contemporary sociology being "powerless to reject the camera's line of sight reset the stage or call on our own sensory apparatus to correct the doctored sights and sounds the machine delivers." mander's four arguments in the book to eliminate television are that telecommunication removes the sense of reality from people television promotes capitalism television can be used as a scapegoat and that all three of these issues negatively work together a 1979 review of the book from the cambridge quarterly stated that 99% of american homes had a television with millions of people watching it for several hours per day. mander stated that television audiences are "either a wanton debasement of values or a towering obstacle to social change" while others have wanted to protest for changes to television programs its controllers and its bad effects. the thesis is that "reform is impossible" due to television and that all television should be abolished. the author came to ir conclusion while ey was working in advertising for 15 years. the book's sources include ir own life experience science fiction and zen # reception michael comber of the cambridge quarterly disagreed with mander's arguments stating that television has room for multiple ideologies and that "technology need not be viewed as a monolithic ogre outside our control incapable of reform and at best fit for only elimination." however comber concluded the review with "in order to transform television one must first understand how television works. to this understanding mander's book makes a useful contribution." kirkus reviews wrote "in the end the author admits the dominant position of tv in our society and concedes ey has no earthly idea of how to bring about its demise. it might be termed an exercise in futility were it not for the intriguing notions it offers" # see also **+** amusing ourselves to death 1985 critique of television by neil postman **+** history of television **+** "is google making us stupid?" **+** luddites as an example of a social movement which opposed specific applications of technology on political and social class grounds **+** media psychology **+** the plug-in drug 1977 critique of television by marie winn **+** screen-free week **+** social aspects of television **+** television and the public interest **+** television studies **+** the shallows **+** the medium is the message **+** quality television // republic of bob