jeudi, décembre 09, 2010

“Who wants to be a Millionaire” appears in its Arab version called “Man sa yarbah al malyoon diffused in Nessma channel
 throughout the cable Nile Sat 12203 V 27500 or Arab Sat 11727 H 27500  
which has a range covering some countries of the Maghreb: Morocco, Tunisia, and Algeria.
Rachid El Ouali is the host of the show diffused
during Ramadan at 6:00pm (Moroccan Local time)

Research Findings

First finding:The viewers are mainly literate people with highly advanced level in Arabic language since the show is diffused in classical Arabic and the level of questions started from the most basic ones to a hardest level gathering different topics from cultural to political.
Second finding:
Educational side of the show: the show enables the audience to gain more knowledge about the historical and the cultural side of the Maghreb Arab.
Third finding:  
the concept of the show is considered as foreign “Marocanized” enough to be considered as a national show.
Fourth finding:
show participation: brings fame and money

mercredi, décembre 01, 2010

Brodcasted Moroccan shows: the case of "“Who Wants to be a Millionaire”

To develop a consisting opinion about how does the show adopted, implemented, and perceived by the Moroccan audience, many articles and videos related to“Who Wants to be a Millionaire” are used in this blog in order to respond to the previous question.

books used in my research paper

Littlejohn, S. W., & Foss. A.K. (2008) Theories of Human Communication . Belmont:   Thomson W
Katz, E. (1959).
Mass communication research and the study of culture. Studies in Public Communication, 2, 1-6
adsworth.
Stohl, C. (in-press). Globalizing organizational communication: Convergence and divergences. In F. Jablin & L. Putnam, The New Handbook of Organizational Communication. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.

Who wants to be a Millionaire - UK