In six pages this paper examines how gender and race in society are negatively influenced by the media. Six sources are cited in the bibliography.
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particular in television but also clearly apparent in music, advertisements and all other entities -- is not created by the media but actually perpetuated stemming from a basis of social
reality. While it is important to understand that the media did not instigate such an existence of discrimination, it is a primary component in continuing the bias that leads
to exclusion, discrimination, hierarchy and domination. How does one deal with the hidden curriculum of gender and racial intolerance in the media? There is no single contributory factor
at which one can point a finger; rather, it is a conglomerate of facts mixed with fiction and overactive imaginations that create the stereotypical images portrayed in media today.
Institutionalized racism, which is the belief that skin color "determines intelligence, criminality and values" (How To Deal With Racism In The Media), is a
dangerous concept when large entities, such as the media, possess and routinely abuse the "power to enforce discrimination" (How To Deal With Racism In The Media). In a perfect world,
all entities, every race and each person would be represented in the same fair light. However, this is not a perfect world, and people of various races and origins
are not given the same fair treatment by the media as others routinely receive. Regardless of the color of ones skin or the sound of ones voice, internalized racial
bias in the media has likely tainted public perception of that particular race on at least one occasion or another. The media have always held the precarious responsibility of
being able to make or break their stories subjects, and entire races of people are no exception. By their very printed or spoken word, the media have been singularly