What we see on screen has this way of influencing our perception of the world, which makes sense because the average American spends 2 hours and 51 minutes watching movies and TV each day. That’s a whopping 19 percent of our waking hours. Walt Hickey is a data journalist and author of a new book called You Are What You Watch. In it, Walt makes a case for how much film and television shapes us as individuals and as a society, far beyond what we give it credit for.
You Are What You Watch
462- I Can't Believe It's Pink Margarine
461- Changing Stripes
323- The House that Came in the Mail Again
460- Corpse, Corps, Horse and Worse
459- Yankee Pyramids
458- Real Fake Bridges
457- Model Organism
456- Full Spectrum
455- A Field Guide to Water
454- War, Famine, Pestilence, and Design
453- The Book of Tasty and Healthy Food
452- The Lows of High Tech
451- Hanko
450- Stuff the British Stole
449- Mine!
448- Katie Mingle's Right to Roam
447- Flag Days: The Red, the Black & the Green
446- Flag Days: Good Luck, True South
445- The Clinch
444- Pipe Dreams
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