● Music Videos and Violence
● Characteristics and Influence of Music Video
● History of Music Video and its Violence in Korea
● Representative Case Analysis in Korea
- Yoo, Seung Jun, “I Will Be Back”- Um, Jung Hwa, “Escape”
- Jo, Sung Mo, “For Your Soul”
- Korea’s Broadcasting Stipulations on Violence and the efficiency
● Current Trends- Top 20 Music Videos in
- Top 20 Music Videos in
● Resolutions and Alternative Measures
For one thing, there’s more of it. According to Guy Paquette and Jacques de Guise, Laval University professors, after studying six major Canadian TV networks, exposure of physical violence incidents has more than tripled between 1993 and 2001. Similar degree of increase in psychological violence was also found, especially concentrated in the last two years. Such violence tends to occur more frequently than physical violence.
Other research indicates that media violence has now just increased in quantity; it has also grown in its degree of violence and its characteristics. More specifically, it has become more graphic and sexual. Explicit pictures of in-act weapons, dead bodies, and pools of blood are shown any time now. On top of this, the ratings of violent media contents are becoming loose; in year 2001, only a quarter of the most violent TV shows, and two-fifths of the movies, were rated R in America. The most of them were rated PG or PG-13.
- Media Awareness Network, "Media Violence,” http://www.media-awareness.ca/english/issues/violence/index.cfm
- 방송위원회, 방송심의규정(放送審議規程)
- Douglas Keilner, “Media Culture,” 1997
- Young Choi and Mi Sook Lee, “The Influence of Music and Rock Videos

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