cover image Teleliteracy: Taking Television Seriously

Teleliteracy: Taking Television Seriously

David Bianculli. Continuum, $24.95 (315pp) ISBN 978-0-8264-0535-7

This conversationally written, zesty but hollow manifesto extolling the benefits of television is only likely to persuade the switched-on. Bianculli, TV critic for the New York Post and the Philadelphia Inquirer , concedes that ``90% of television is . . . crap,'' but insists that ``the best of television is very good indeed.'' Far from being a corrupter of literacy, the tube, he speciously argues, can make viewers more literate through programs like Sesame Street and adaptations of Dickens or Trollope that send viewers back to the novels. Dismissing links between TV violence and street violence as impossible to prove, he urges that classrooms teach children what TV can offer and praises the medium's coverage of the Gulf War. Drawing on interviews with Linda Ellerbee, Bill Cosby, Peter Jennings, Kurt Vonnegut, Shelley Duvall and others, Bianculli presents a rosy image of television as a growing, maturing medium, better now than in its golden age. A gimmicky ``teleliteracy quiz'' is included. Photos. (June)