ABSTRACT
The study examined the influence of
Super Story on the social behaviour of students of Cross River University of
Technology, Calabar. Use and gratification theory and cultivation theory served
as the theoretical framework of the study. The researcher employed survey as
the research design. The research instrument was questionnaire. The systematic
and simple random sampling techniques were employed to select the sample. It
was discovered that 51.8% did not watch Super Story too often. 49.6% of the
students did not imitate what they watched on Super Story, and that 45.9%
agreed that the soap had a positive influence on them because it taught them
morals. The study concludes that Super Story serves as a source of
entertainment, education, information to the student; and that it is more preferred
to other Nigerian soap operas because of it peculiarity. It recommends that
National broadcasting commission should encourage the production of more
indigenous soap operas like super story which portrays our indigenous cultures
and values.
CHAPTER ONE
INTRODUCTION
1.0 Background of the study
According to Dictionary of American
History (2003), soap operas are serialized dramas that were presented, usually
daily, first on radio and then on television. The name was derived from the
fact that manufacturers of soaps and other household products, most notably
Procter and Gamble, were frequent sponsors of these programs. Although
serialized stories had existed prior to the soap opera in printed fiction,
comic strips, and movies, none of these forms exhibited the durability of the
soap opera. The Guiding light, for example, started on radio in 1937 and
moved to television in 1952. Still airing original episodes in 2002 after
nearly seventy years, The Guiding Light is the longest story ever told
in human history. Credit for the first soap opera usually goes to Irna
Phillips, who created Painted Dreams for WGN radio in Chicago in 1930.
The first national soap was Betty
and Bob, created by Frank and Anne Hummert for NBC radio in 1932. Both
Phillips and the Hummerts provided a wide variety of soaps for network radio
over the next several years; only Phillips, however, would make the transition
to television. After many decades, the Phillips-created serials as the World
Turns, the Guiding Light, and Days of Our Lives were still on the
air. The soap opera was designed for women and women were frequently employed
to create, produce, and write them. Besides Irna Phillips and Anne Hummert,
other prolific soap opera artists included Elaine Carrington (Pepper Young's
Family, Red Adams); Agnes Nixon (All My Children, One Life to Live);
and Lee Phillip Bell (with her husband, William Bell, The Young and the
Restless and The Bold and the Beautiful).
As gender roles changed significantly
in the latter half of the twentieth century, the principal audience for soap
operas—women who were at home during the day—began to diminish. In the 1970s,
many soap operas were redesigned to attract younger viewers and college
students. By the 1980s, soap operas like General Hospital were achieving
high ratings among these younger viewers as well as among men. While early soap
stories focused almost exclusively on romance and domestic home life, from the
mid-1970s soaps often borrowed from other genres, integrating glamorous
on-location settings and even elements of science fiction. The soap operas of
Agnes Nixon became known in the 1970s and 1980s for their frank depiction of
social issues in stories about rape, abortion, infertility, depression, child
abuse, AIDS, and a variety of other controversial topics.
The first soap opera on network
television, Faraway Hill, ran on the Dumont network in 1946 as an
evening series. As had been the case in radio, however, the TV soap quickly
settled into the daytime schedule. It was not until ABC introduced Peyton
Place in 1964 that a serious attempt to return the soap to prime time was
launched. Like a daytime soap, Peyton Place ran multiple episodes per
week (up to three); had a huge cast of over one hundred; and did not broadcast
reruns, even during the summer. Despite the commercial success of the series,
however, the idea was not imitated again for years. In 1978, Dallas (CBS,
1978–1991) ushered in the era of the prime-time soap opera. Dallas employed
multiple ongoing story lines and end-of-episode cliffhangers and, within a few
years, became the most-watched series on TV. More prime-time soap operas were
introduced over the next few years, including Knots Landing (CBS,
1979–1993), Dynasty (ABC, 1981–1989), and Falcon Crest (CBS,
1981–1990). Although the prime-time soap had begun to wane by the 1990s, its
influence was felt in nearly all genres of fictional television series. Before
the advent of the prime-time soap, most series episodes were
totally self-contained, with little or
no reference to events that had happened in previous episodes. Since then, most
series have employed some continuing elements from episode to episode.
In 2000, Disney/ABC introduced Soap
Net, a channel devoted to reruns of daytime and prime-time serials, and another
soap channel was expected from Columbia TriStar Television. The
Spanish-language networks Univision and Telemundo offer imported soap operas,
telenovelas, which play to very large audiences. Even MTV, the youth-oriented
cable channel, introduced its own soap opera, Undressed, in 1999.
According to National Mirror newspaper
(2014), soap opera in Nigeria dates back to the 1970s and 1980s with soap
operas such as New Masquerade Village Headmaster, Behind the Clouds, Checkmate,
and Mirror in the Sun, and Cock Crow at Dawn‘. But now soaps such as ‗Tinsel‘,
‗Spider‘, ‗Domino‘, ‗Treasures‘, ‗Clinic Matters‘ ‗Super Story‘, ―My Mum and
I‖, ―Dear Mother‖ and ―One Love‖ has taken over the screens with better
graphics, skills and also different story line which usually has a moral lesson
at the end of each episode.
Soap operas most of the time makes use
of the medium of television for dissemination of information, since the
invention of television people have been able to keep abreast of the happening
in their environment either through entertainment, educative, informative
programs such as soap operas.
The basic characteristics of any
television program are its educative and entertainment functions. These
programs inform the audience about the ongoing events or happenings in the
society, in most cases while watching the soap opera the viewers gain
information that tend to be applicable
to the real world. Soap opera such as Super
Story always have a vital message to convey to its audience and this
message serves as a form of education to the youths who view the programme.
These messages could enlighten them on topical issues such as marriage,
relationship, diseases (HIV, cancer), character building and even cultural
heritage. The moral lessons derived from the programme helps them cultivate an
upright lifestyle; for instance if the programme centers negative consequences
of excessive youthful exuberance and juvenile delinquency, the youths viewing
the programme would want to abstain from such behaviour in order to avoid such
consequences befalling them. For its entertainment function, it eases people
from tension and relives them of stress for instance after going through stress
of a long day watching a soap opera can serve as a form of relaxation. This
study examines the influence of Super Storyon the social behaviour of Cross
River University of Technology, Calabar.
Super Story is a Nigerian television series
created by Wale Adenuga who published the magazine on which the programme is
based on. It started airing in 2001 in the Nigerian television authority
(NTA).it runs for 45 minutes. According to the executive producer, the Message
of the story designed is to focus on various social issues at all times. We try
to project the good, the bad and the ugly of the society. Super Story is
well- known for its slogan, ―We are nothing but pencils in the hands of our
creator.‖
1.1 Statement of the problem
The media has been able to bring a
change in the society using television, radio, magazines, newspaper etc to
disseminate information, entertain and also to enlighten people most especially
in developing countries. Television is a medium of change that Airs programmes
such as soap opera. The content in the soap opera differ but has growth comes
into the society, advancement in technology and ideas are bound to change. All
soap opera have different moral lessons; the problem now is what influences
those soap opera such as Super Story have on the youth of today. Do they
gain more on the positive side or the negative? Does it make them better future
leaders, has it increased the rate of drugs, prostitution, armed robbery,
internet fraud, drinking, smoking, etc or has it decreased it. Therefore, the
study examined critically influence of Super Story on the social
behaviour of Cross River University of Technology, Calabar
1.2 Objectives of the Study
The objectives of the study were as
follows:
1. To ascertain how often the students
watch Super Story.
2. To determine whether the students
imitate what they watch on Super Story.
3. To find out the influence (both
negative and positive) Super Story has on the students.
TOPIC: INFLUENCE OF SUPER STORY ON THE SOCIAL BEHAVIOUR OF YOUTHS
Format: MS Word
Chapters: 1 - 5
Delivery: Email
Delivery: Email
Number of Pages: 51
Price: 3000 NGN
In Stock

No comments:
Post a Comment
Add Comment