When I grew up in the late 60's and 70's, I recall when the media was not so centralized, they even had a televised high school quiz show, so people felt that they really had a place in society . . . . Nowadays, everything is so centralized and up-scaled that it is easy for someone to feel completely insignificant in the big picture . . . . This is one of the results of capitalism, the changing of many small businesses into huge monolithic corporations, the banks, the media, and forming an elite small group of far-to-wealthy individuals who have to much power. When you start to take away the natural threads that tie society together, you start to see bad things happening. Many governments are part of the problem too, because they demonize other societies to draw attention away from their own shortcomings, spread fear, and use fear as a substitute glue to hold together these weak-knit societies, and keep them from falling apart or turning against their government.
those were the days of Walter Cronkite, Mike Wallace & some other news anchors who were honest, trustworthy & had integrity.
now the concentrated ownership of the major US networks is less impartial & believable than the russian or chinese media, imo.
Was the show called "It's academic" ? and it also appears to me any local programming, which that was has now been turned into nothing but a gossip show with a commercial woven in.
No, it was called High School Quiz Bowl. Likely just a local phenomenon.
I grew up in the 60's and early 70's too. Unfortunately we will never see times like those again. Seems like in those days everyone was humble. Now those people are a very small minority. I miss those old times.