Amazing! As Board President of the National Association for Media Literacy Education, we want to thank you for making this media literacy series happen. We're excited to follow and share it with our communities. Please let us know if we can help.
In terms of anxiety on writing things down, an earlier media fear might be criticising graven images as facilitating idolatry. So an illustrated book comes with the threat of ruining your memory and turning you into a pagan.
Listen I got on my laptop to post this comment, because Microsoft is too shortsighted to provide UA-cam comment services on the Xbox one app. This new guy is awesome. He delivers the content cleanly with some slightly funny moments. Highly recommend keeping him around!
Finally someone mentioning Luther's dark side. Here in Germany it's totally ignored by politics and the church and last year was even officially celebrated as the "Luther Year", including an additional holiday and all.
Good content. I major in Media Studies at UC Berkeley and this is concurrent with everything i am learning in a Media History class and is really helpful. thank you
Wow, thanks for this! Blown away (oops) by the Pulitzer part. He apparently was no saint when it comes to the world of journalism, and yet here we are, awarding journalists under his name.
Another great episode, particularly talking about truth vs. sensationalism. Those early newspaper headlines are reminiscent of the tabloids at grocery checkouts.
As someone who is studying communication and media in college, this video gives me a lot of new stuff that I didn't get in class. I hope more people watch this series!
It is really fascinating to compare what the host is saying about yellow journalism to today with the how nuts the internet has gotten with its own issues with misinformation.
A great Discworld book related to this topic is "The Truth" by Terry Pratchett. It takes place in a fictional world where magic exists, but there are many parallels with our Roundworld :)
Excellent condensation and causal analysis. That little “oh but you also need to know that this Catholic person from 500 years ago hated Jews” yeah, like DUH. That sticks out like a sore thumb.
Fun fact: The Mongols (always the exception!) brought printing presses in their early expeditions to the west, and reprinted Bibles for the Christian westerners as one of the services they traded there. That pissed off the churches, who controlled the states, who attacked the Mongol explorers/traders, who returned to the east and reported that the peoples of the west were violent barbaric hordes in need of conquering for the sake of their own civilization.
The difference between printing and a printing press is important. Even Europe had printing before Gutenberg; the problem was that you needed to carve a whole stamp for each page you tried to print, so it was very rarely useful. Gutenberg's printing press and its moveable type meant you only needed a few dozen stamps to print anything you wanted (though in practice you'd want a couple hundred, so you could print an entire page at once). _This_ is what made Gutenberg's printing press into a force that changed the world. With about as much equipment as it would take to make just a few whole-page printing stamps, you could theoretically print _anything._ Translations of the Bible, rival translations of the Bible, arguments over interpreting the Bible...some people even used it for non-religious stuff! (And for anyone wondering why the Chinese didn't do this: Their written language was designed to be a _lingua franca_ between dozens of mutually unintelligible dialects/languages, and hence has thousands of unique characters. Even if someone worked out the technology required for doing that, it would have been hellishly expensive to actually make or use.)
That strict periodisation where Gutenberg’s press was the exact moment when literacy spread to people of all classes is some pretty old thinking, Eisenstein with the whole “print culture” meme if I’m not mistaken. A really good book about how misleading this can be is The Nature of the Book by Adrian Johns, I understand you’re constrained by time and audience but this is a fairly nuanced point which I hope you’ll address in more detail.
Movable type was invented in 1040 AD in China. The types were made of clay but was replaced by metallic types in the 12th century. Literacy can be a threat to the ruling power, but when your empire was as powerful as China was at the time, mass literacy was necessary for maintaining the massive bureaucracy and economy that covers land area as large as, if not larger, than the Roman Empire. Movable type enables a reliable way to mass produce paper money. Higher literacy mean more people can read and follow laws and pay taxes. While literacy remained low for most of China, there were enough middle-class in urban and some in rural area to keep the government, economy, and society as a whole from collapsing.
On a lot of the internet, yes, but there are still reliable sources out there. They just aren't the ones chasing the most sensationalized stories, so they're the ones we have to seek out. The ones that find us aren't the most reputable.
This series has come at a perfect time considering the worlds current political climate. I don't know why but I have a feeling of a potential red pill... anyone else?
People still often rely on clergy to interpret. I suggest evidence of various ideas of interpretation, but looking at cults being gate keepers of information and how. Some political cults are forcing indoctrination on kids besides religious cults. Though that is a whole other thing. I digress. Censorship happens but self censorship happens as well. That ignorance and willing ignorance besides stereotype, misinformation, and such. Most don't look at things skeptically and with critical thinking it seems, or cherry picking is done. Though I can see why it is not easy to be literate with how the human brain functions with such behaviors in general. Thanks for this.
"...they called it 'yellow journalism' because Pulitzer and Hearst's papers fought over which one would print a popular comic called The Yellow Kid." Wait...something called "The _Yellow_ Kid" made in the late 19th century? It wasn't the kind of comic that would see publication today, was it?
Why are the figures in such dramatic colors? Also, I see you have some books on the desk there. Should I be giving them a look? Would love to some book recommendations.
sorry to be /that guy/ but Luther translated the Bible from Greek and Hebrew* to German (not from Latin). But there was a previous translation actually made for the Catholic church named the "Vulgate" translation and that's a whole other story! Great video as always though!
That Plato quote is about how "them young people" ruin the good old oral tradition by writing poems into books and how that ruins the young peoples ability to memorize something. It's your mum yelling "go read a book! The TV is ruining your eyes!". I dont think you can intereprete that as being worried about how people could misintereprete your intention when you write things down. ... I think there is some irony here somewhere...
Dirus Jim I Am from Egypt .. country located in the middle east .. we speak Arabic .. this videos don't translated .. so I can't understand .. thanks for important :-)
The first two minutes of this video is a shockingly good summary of what I learned one quarter at college
Amazing! As Board President of the National Association for Media Literacy Education, we want to thank you for making this media literacy series happen. We're excited to follow and share it with our communities. Please let us know if we can help.
"it was a strange time" it still is Jay, it still is
That's it! No more writing anything down! 🤔
Ryan Liberty / Mental Health woah dude I watch your videos
Sweet! 👋
my teachers will love this excuse
In terms of anxiety on writing things down, an earlier media fear might be criticising graven images as facilitating idolatry. So an illustrated book comes with the threat of ruining your memory and turning you into a pagan.
Listen I got on my laptop to post this comment, because Microsoft is too shortsighted to provide UA-cam comment services on the Xbox one app.
This new guy is awesome. He delivers the content cleanly with some slightly funny moments. Highly recommend keeping him around!
Finally someone mentioning Luther's dark side. Here in Germany it's totally ignored by politics and the church and last year was even officially celebrated as the "Luther Year", including an additional holiday and all.
Good content. I major in Media Studies at UC Berkeley and this is concurrent with everything i am learning in a Media History class and is really helpful. thank you
Play Dough, the Greek Philosopher
Just listen to that smooth voice, can you please get a podcast?
He's on the radio, at least.
i think he mentioned his other show in the last episode? or the teaser trailer or something
I really hate making up names for this kind of stuff agreed
I used to watch him all the time on his UA-cam channel. I believe he is on other platforms as well.
Click bait before there were clicks.
Francois Lacombe penny bait
Wow, thanks for this! Blown away (oops) by the Pulitzer part. He apparently was no saint when it comes to the world of journalism, and yet here we are, awarding journalists under his name.
Another great episode, particularly talking about truth vs. sensationalism. Those early newspaper headlines are reminiscent of the tabloids at grocery checkouts.
As someone who is studying communication and media in college, this video gives me a lot of new stuff that I didn't get in class. I hope more people watch this series!
Did the host change his name to “Jay Smooth”? It’s too fitting. He’s so smooooooooth
It is really fascinating to compare what the host is saying about yellow journalism to today with the how nuts the internet has gotten with its own issues with misinformation.
syeina mass media to tin foil hats making up conspiracy without evidence. Though people ear it up and they make money.
Joshua Nunn More like Breitbart.
syeina we use to have subscriptions
This series is so good, thanks for this.
Thank you so much for inpirsing me to apply for a film minor. It might not go with my science degree but I'm super happy
Blame the main on spain
Ethan Republic THE SUN IS A DEADLY LASER
Leo Zebra didn't think anyone would notice
Maine*
@@BuildinWings we could make a religion out of this*
A great Discworld book related to this topic is "The Truth" by Terry Pratchett. It takes place in a fictional world where magic exists, but there are many parallels with our Roundworld :)
Like I've always said-the flaming Maine was plainly blamed on Spain.
This host is a very Smooth dude.
i liked this series and i am planning to watch it till the end !
Love your history of media awesome I’m writing an essay about media great info
I think I'll change my name to Al Smooth
Jay!!!!!!!! I missed you on UA-cam! Good to see you again
Excellent condensation and causal analysis. That little “oh but you also need to know that this Catholic person from 500 years ago hated Jews” yeah, like DUH. That sticks out like a sore thumb.
Guys im a emerging media and communications major. This is golden.
This is already so good!
This channel is fantastic!
This series is great!
Didn't the Chinese have printing before Gutenberg?
Fun fact: The Mongols (always the exception!) brought printing presses in their early expeditions to the west, and reprinted Bibles for the Christian westerners as one of the services they traded there. That pissed off the churches, who controlled the states, who attacked the Mongol explorers/traders, who returned to the east and reported that the peoples of the west were violent barbaric hordes in need of conquering for the sake of their own civilization.
Pfhorrest sounds interesting! Do you have a source so I can learn more about it?
The Chinese did invent printing, but it was Gutenberg who invented the printing press.
Michael Gibb define "printing press"
The difference between printing and a printing press is important. Even Europe had printing before Gutenberg; the problem was that you needed to carve a whole stamp for each page you tried to print, so it was very rarely useful.
Gutenberg's printing press and its moveable type meant you only needed a few dozen stamps to print anything you wanted (though in practice you'd want a couple hundred, so you could print an entire page at once). _This_ is what made Gutenberg's printing press into a force that changed the world. With about as much equipment as it would take to make just a few whole-page printing stamps, you could theoretically print _anything._ Translations of the Bible, rival translations of the Bible, arguments over interpreting the Bible...some people even used it for non-religious stuff!
(And for anyone wondering why the Chinese didn't do this: Their written language was designed to be a _lingua franca_ between dozens of mutually unintelligible dialects/languages, and hence has thousands of unique characters. Even if someone worked out the technology required for doing that, it would have been hellishly expensive to actually make or use.)
Jay: Socrates's biggest problem with people was writing.
Also Jay: Socrate writes
That strict periodisation where Gutenberg’s press was the exact moment when literacy spread to people of all classes is some pretty old thinking, Eisenstein with the whole “print culture” meme if I’m not mistaken. A really good book about how misleading this can be is The Nature of the Book by Adrian Johns, I understand you’re constrained by time and audience but this is a fairly nuanced point which I hope you’ll address in more detail.
Judas priest's album in the back has me more excited! Not because i am bored, more so because there's nothing more exciting than metal.
Movable type was invented in 1040 AD in China. The types were made of clay but was replaced by metallic types in the 12th century. Literacy can be a threat to the ruling power, but when your empire was as powerful as China was at the time, mass literacy was necessary for maintaining the massive bureaucracy and economy that covers land area as large as, if not larger, than the Roman Empire. Movable type enables a reliable way to mass produce paper money. Higher literacy mean more people can read and follow laws and pay taxes. While literacy remained low for most of China, there were enough middle-class in urban and some in rural area to keep the government, economy, and society as a whole from collapsing.
i love this series
Great series!
Newsies reference!!!
Jay Smooth!!!
Languages are ever evolving so it is a challenge to keep up with literacy also.
I absolutly adore it
Great sir! Love form🇧🇩
that guy sounds so american.
i love it.
Buzzfeed Yellow now sounds strangely appropriate
yay,nicole's voice at the end!
Way to go J smooth!
I love those eyebrows on Martin Luther...
It would appear that "yellow Journalism" has now become journalism.
On a lot of the internet, yes, but there are still reliable sources out there. They just aren't the ones chasing the most sensationalized stories, so they're the ones we have to seek out. The ones that find us aren't the most reputable.
This series has come at a perfect time considering the worlds current political climate. I don't know why but I have a feeling of a potential red pill... anyone else?
Great series
People still often rely on clergy to interpret. I suggest evidence of various ideas of interpretation, but looking at cults being gate keepers of information and how. Some political cults are forcing indoctrination on kids besides religious cults. Though that is a whole other thing. I digress.
Censorship happens but self censorship happens as well. That ignorance and willing ignorance besides stereotype, misinformation, and such. Most don't look at things skeptically and with critical thinking it seems, or cherry picking is done. Though I can see why it is not easy to be literate with how the human brain functions with such behaviors in general.
Thanks for this.
Jennifer Isaacs h
“Pulitzer and Hearst, they think they got us?”
Do they got us?”
“No!”
"...they called it 'yellow journalism' because Pulitzer and Hearst's papers fought over which one would print a popular comic called The Yellow Kid."
Wait...something called "The _Yellow_ Kid" made in the late 19th century? It wasn't the kind of comic that would see publication today, was it?
Actually, he wasn't asian...no one would read a comic about an asian kid in the US back then.
Timothy McLean Actually it's The Simpdons of the 19th century.
If anything, he was Irish. The Irish weren't any more popular than the Chinese, except among themselves.
Timothy McLean No, it was actually printed on yellow paper, to stand out in the news stand.
@R3Testa His name was Mickey Dugan, so I think you got it right.
“Good thing we don’t have to worry about that today.” LOL
this was a great video 🐢
PlayDoh is my favourite philosopher
😉
Why are the figures in such dramatic colors? Also, I see you have some books on the desk there. Should I be giving them a look? Would love to some book recommendations.
Great job!
sorry to be /that guy/ but Luther translated the Bible from Greek and Hebrew* to German (not from Latin). But there was a previous translation actually made for the Catholic church named the "Vulgate" translation and that's a whole other story! Great video as always though!
The Media, has Begun to Re-write History!
If Pulitzer was selling yellow journalism, why today we have a journalism prize name from him?
damn this guy is smooth
Yellow Journalism = The Daily Mail today. LOL
Jay: *say the phrase*journalistic ethics"*
Me: *violent flashbacks*
my boy luther!!
Is that Nicole’s voice in the end?
And now I want to watch Newsies
Dang, I had no idea clickbait was that old!
Educational!
8:47 what does yellow snow taste like
What about the letter press before Gutenberg, I think in China? Will it be in part 2?
is there a difference between philosophy and MIL?
You're a rather "persuasive" man yourself, Mr. Smooth. Just kidding, sort of. I
The origins of click bait
"Good thing we don't have to worry about today..."
*Was this dude actually serious?"
no
That Plato quote is about how "them young people" ruin the good old oral tradition by writing poems into books and how that ruins the young peoples ability to memorize something. It's your mum yelling "go read a book! The TV is ruining your eyes!".
I dont think you can intereprete that as being worried about how people could misintereprete your intention when you write things down. ... I think there is some irony here somewhere...
"22 Things You're Doing Wrong Without Realizing It" - BuzzFeed
Can you please explain to me why you wont fix both crash course theater playlist and the crash course mythology?
Willie Preisig what do they need to fix?
Jennifer Isaacs need to post the episode in crash course theater and need to add 36 37 40 and 41 of in crash course mythology
All media today is yellow as well. Only the degree of yellow is different.
2:13
I miss the summary at the end, so it's more difficult to find a structure in what you say.
he said 1452 but then said his was the 15th century....
My space Tom
When is cash course math coming out
Nice Judas Priest LP 🤘🏻
You should have pointed out that Randolph Hearst probably was the actual devil.
So in summation: all the issues you see with press right now have happened before...
Is he from Chicago?
Sensational news headlines to attract attention and make money from advertisers . . . Ah, the more things change, the more they stay the same.
3rd
That Targaryen infinity and beyond 108.
Pulitzer and Heartz? They think we're nuthin' are we nuthin'? NO!
"publishers choosing profit over truth"
damn
Hoi
eurocentric
Was it Plato or Socrates?!!!
Can you please add a little pause before the outro? I need like a second for the information to settle.
So the Pulitzer prize is inspired by a lousy newspaper? Great video anyway! Keep goooing
Is it?
Plato was dark!
يا جماعة هي الفيديوهات مش مترجمة ليه
Omar Hussin what?
Dirus Jim I Am from Egypt .. country located in the middle east .. we speak Arabic .. this videos don't translated .. so I can't understand .. thanks for important :-)
Is he talking like Christopher Walker?? 😱