This Easter Sunday, at 10:00 AM, Los Angeles PBS affiliate KCLS will air Fielding media psychology faculty Jean-Pierre Isbouts' TV special, "Young Jesus: An Interfaith Perspective." This is a fascinating 1-hour special, which also aired on Good Friday during prime time, hosted by Jean-Pierre and based on his new book "Young Jesus: Restoring the Lost Years of a Social Activist and Religious Dissident," which was officially released by Sterling/Barnes & Noble this week. The film features a roster of top scholars whom Jean-Pierre interviewed over the past few years, including Profs. Elaine Pagels, Bruce Chilton, Jacob Neusner, Peter Awn, Frank Peters, UCLA's Khaled Abou El Fadl and Rabbi Peter Rubenstein, as well as a wonderful CG reconstruction of Caesarea, Herod's high-tech harbor on Judea's Mediterranean coast. In addition to teaching at Fielding, Jean-Pierre is the owner of Pantheon Studios. Jean-Pierre is an excellent example of a media psychologist as a scholar and … [Read more...]
Media Technologies Change the Rules
Gibson guitars is suing Activision for patent violation in Activision's wildly popular Guitar Hero according to a story posted by Reuters. This is just one more example of how the proliferation of media technologies is changing the way we understand our world. Trying to apply old rules and old thinking to new technologies isn't going to work. (And who knew you could file a patent to prevent the "simulation of a musical performance?") New thinking is required for video games, too. A January entry by Chris Faylor on the blog Shack News links to a cool story about how Guitar Hero was successfully used for rehabilitating range of motion of a patient's arm and shoulder. An occupational therapist told Shack News that: "We'd been doing a lot (of rehabilitation work) with range of motion, but (the patient) was still lacking in pronation and supination in his forearm...Guitar Hero really helped out a lot with that, especially the supination because he had to hold that pose." This … [Read more...]
Reality TV’s 15 Minutes of Fame
I had a discussion with a reporter from a German newspaper last week. She was interested in the American take on Reality TV—specifically about humiliation and debasement as a form of entertainment. She asked, should there be similar legislation against public humiliation as there is against profanity, sexual and violent content? I hadn’t really given it a lot of thought, frankly, and this was a good excuse to do so. It is important to point out that “reality TV” isn’t really “reality.” Reality TV is contrived and controlled through editing, scripting, stunts to elevate the conflict and emotion by producers, film editors, writers, sets, and the participants themselves. Everyone who goes on the Jerry Springer Show, the Dr. Phil show, Big Brother or Celebrity Detox has seen the shows. They know what the shows are like and they know what to expect. I don’t think this is a big secret. Like Wrestlemania, it is contrived reality to function as … [Read more...]
Old(er) students and new media
Fielding Graduate University is holding an orientation for new doctoral students in media psychology in Santa Barbara. (Fielding has the only doctoral program in media psychology in the U.S.) This is the first time I’ve participated from the ‘orienter’ rather than ‘orientee’ perspective. It is fun to get to know new people, of course, but it is also really inspiring on two counts. The first is that seeing other’s enthusiasm reminds me how exciting a field media psychology really is. The second is how different it is to have an incoming class of accomplished adults rather than people who, though no less enthusiastic, are at the beginning of their careers. (Now I recognize my bias here as an old person, which I am defining as anything over 35.) Not only do adult learners bring a wealth of experience and skills from different backgrounds, partly a product of media psychology’s breadth, but they also have the wisdom that comes from living through the changing technologies and … [Read more...]

