Question #4: How might a narrow understanding of television have contributed to a lack of attentiveness to sound? Does an attentiveness to sound help draw our attention to aspects of television practice that typically go unconsidered?
The sound studies show that over the years, there has been an enormous growth in the field of sound. Because of the many discoveries and interventions, media was developed and there has been a rapid progress in the fields of radio, film, move production, recording and listening cultures (Hilmes, 2008). Since the 1980s, film sound has been subjected to an analysis. The video games even received attention in order for the researchers and scholars to fully understand why people hanker into playing such. Hilmes (2008)
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The story of an event is then portrayed as if it is happening on the actual because television has with it the ideology of vivacity and exuberance (Smith, 2005). This kind of set up is a part of the role of television and such happening could not be only recognized as a product of technology. The shows in the television vary from one interest to another. However, every show uses the most important factor that contributes to a television’s ideological liveliness—the use of sound. This is because the sound employed in any movie or show appeals to the sense of hearing on the part of the audience compared to the cinematic gaze it brings. When a viewer’s attention is drawn into the sound of a television, his or her attention is subsequently drawn away from the surrounding objects of consideration. Every home as a television of their own and it cannot be denied that a television has become a domestic appliance. People tend to have television as their company in most of the things they do—cooking, eating, caring for their children, cleaning the house, as means of family bonding and so on. Hence, television as become more of an auditor rather than a viewer. This is because the sound it employs manipulates the attention of its audience. If an audience is not listening or is not attentive to it, the use of sound gets its attention back again. It is then very evident that tthe absence of the audio in a television will defeat its ability to manipulate and control its