Diversity and age stereotypes in portrayals of older adults in popular American primetime television series
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2021
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Čedomir Markov, Youngmin Yoon
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To examine the prevalence and diversity of older adults on primetime television, and age stereotyping in these portrayals, we analysed the contents of 112 episodes of popular American television series aired between 2004 and 2018. We identified 6.6 per cent of characters as aged 65 and older – a slight improvement to the values reported in previous studies. However, older adult characters are still grossly under-represented, considering the actual proportion of older adults in the general population of the United States of America. Further, the typical older character was young-old, male, Caucasian, middleclass, able-bodied and straight – if his sexuality was referenced. Older women still face double discrimination in media representations. In addition, older adult characters with ethnicities other than Caucasian and African American are virtually invisible in primetime fiction series. Similarly, old-old characters, sexual minorities and persons with disabilities are particularly rare ...among older adult characters in this type of programming. Finally, portrayals of 51.9 per cent of characters included at least some elements of age stereotypes, most of which were positive. The most commonly applied positive and negative stereotypes were found to be the golden ager and the shrew, respectively. The findings are discussed in the context of the dominant discourse of ageing and the potential implications of how various social groups perceive ageing and older adults.
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media portrayal / primetime television / older adults / diversity / age stereotypesSource:
Ageing & Society, 2021, 41, 12, 2747-2767Publisher:
- Cambridge : Cambridge University Press
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IFDTTY - JOUR AU - Markov, Čedomir AU - Yoon, Youngmin PY - 2021 UR - http://rifdt.instifdt.bg.ac.rs/123456789/2507 AB - To examine the prevalence and diversity of older adults on primetime television, and age stereotyping in these portrayals, we analysed the contents of 112 episodes of popular American television series aired between 2004 and 2018. We identified 6.6 per cent of characters as aged 65 and older – a slight improvement to the values reported in previous studies. However, older adult characters are still grossly under-represented, considering the actual proportion of older adults in the general population of the United States of America. Further, the typical older character was young-old, male, Caucasian, middleclass, able-bodied and straight – if his sexuality was referenced. Older women still face double discrimination in media representations. In addition, older adult characters with ethnicities other than Caucasian and African American are virtually invisible in primetime fiction series. Similarly, old-old characters, sexual minorities and persons with disabilities are particularly rare among older adult characters in this type of programming. Finally, portrayals of 51.9 per cent of characters included at least some elements of age stereotypes, most of which were positive. The most commonly applied positive and negative stereotypes were found to be the golden ager and the shrew, respectively. The findings are discussed in the context of the dominant discourse of ageing and the potential implications of how various social groups perceive ageing and older adults. PB - Cambridge : Cambridge University Press T2 - Ageing & Society T1 - Diversity and age stereotypes in portrayals of older adults in popular American primetime television series IS - 12 VL - 41 SP - 2747 EP - 2767 DO - 10.1017/S0144686X20000549 ER -
@article{ author = "Markov, Čedomir and Yoon, Youngmin", year = "2021", abstract = "To examine the prevalence and diversity of older adults on primetime television, and age stereotyping in these portrayals, we analysed the contents of 112 episodes of popular American television series aired between 2004 and 2018. We identified 6.6 per cent of characters as aged 65 and older – a slight improvement to the values reported in previous studies. However, older adult characters are still grossly under-represented, considering the actual proportion of older adults in the general population of the United States of America. Further, the typical older character was young-old, male, Caucasian, middleclass, able-bodied and straight – if his sexuality was referenced. Older women still face double discrimination in media representations. In addition, older adult characters with ethnicities other than Caucasian and African American are virtually invisible in primetime fiction series. Similarly, old-old characters, sexual minorities and persons with disabilities are particularly rare among older adult characters in this type of programming. Finally, portrayals of 51.9 per cent of characters included at least some elements of age stereotypes, most of which were positive. The most commonly applied positive and negative stereotypes were found to be the golden ager and the shrew, respectively. The findings are discussed in the context of the dominant discourse of ageing and the potential implications of how various social groups perceive ageing and older adults.", publisher = "Cambridge : Cambridge University Press", journal = "Ageing & Society", title = "Diversity and age stereotypes in portrayals of older adults in popular American primetime television series", number = "12", volume = "41", pages = "2747-2767", doi = "10.1017/S0144686X20000549" }
Markov, Č.,& Yoon, Y.. (2021). Diversity and age stereotypes in portrayals of older adults in popular American primetime television series. in Ageing & Society Cambridge : Cambridge University Press., 41(12), 2747-2767. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0144686X20000549
Markov Č, Yoon Y. Diversity and age stereotypes in portrayals of older adults in popular American primetime television series. in Ageing & Society. 2021;41(12):2747-2767. doi:10.1017/S0144686X20000549 .
Markov, Čedomir, Yoon, Youngmin, "Diversity and age stereotypes in portrayals of older adults in popular American primetime television series" in Ageing & Society, 41, no. 12 (2021):2747-2767, https://doi.org/10.1017/S0144686X20000549 . .