Face2Face - Television

Television

  • Face to Face (1990 Philippine TV series), a Philippine show-business program aired by GMA Network
  • Face to Face (Australian TV series), a 1990s political talk program
  • Face to Face (British TV series), a 1959–1962 interview programme, revived 1989–1998
  • Face to Face (Hong Kong TV series), a Hong Kong series on TVB featuring Cindy Au
  • Face to Face (Philippine TV series), a 2010 Philippine talk show
  • Face to Face (US TV series), an NBC-TV game show (1946–1947)
  • "Face to Face", an episode of I Love Lucy

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Famous quotes containing the word television:

    It is among the ranks of school-age children, those six- to twelve-year-olds who once avidly filled their free moments with childhood play, that the greatest change is evident. In the place of traditional, sometimes ancient childhood games that were still popular a generation ago, in the place of fantasy and make- believe play . . . today’s children have substituted television viewing and, most recently, video games.
    Marie Winn (20th century)

    Television ... helps blur the distinction between framed and unframed reality. Whereas going to the movies necessarily entails leaving one’s ordinary surroundings, soap operas are in fact spatially inseparable from the rest of one’s life. In homes where television is on most of the time, they are also temporally integrated into one’s “real” life and, unlike the experience of going out in the evening to see a show, may not even interrupt its regular flow.
    Eviatar Zerubavel, U.S. sociologist, educator. The Fine Line: Making Distinctions in Everyday Life, ch. 5, University of Chicago Press (1991)

    The television screen, so unlike the movie screen, sharply reduced human beings, revealed them as small, trivial, flat, in two banal dimensions, drained of color. Wasn’t there something reassuring about it!—that human beings were in fact merely images of a kind registered in one another’s eyes and brains, phenomena composed of microscopic flickering dots like atoms. They were atoms—nothing more. A quick switch of the dial and they disappeared and who could lament the loss?
    Joyce Carol Oates (b. 1938)