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Ne4ueva [31]
2 years ago
9

According to gustave le bon, crowd behavior is essentially ______, so if one person gets excited, angry, or violent, others will

quickly pick up on these emotions and actions.
Social Studies
1 answer:
spayn [35]2 years ago
3 0

According to Gustave le Bon, crowd behavior is essentially <u>contagious</u>, so if one person gets excited, angry, or violent, others will quickly pick up on these emotions and actions.

Contagious illnesses are unfolded by means of touch, while infectious illnesses are unfolded through infectious retailers. So while something is contagious, it is also infectious due to the fact some touch uncovered you or your animal to the infectious agent. Something infectious but is not always contagious.

Contagious contamination is one that is unfolded by means of getting into contact with someone who is unwell (who's inflamed with an infectious agent). Something contagious (together with a virulent disease or bacteria) unfolds from one person or animal to some other through touching or by way of entering contact with any other person or animal's germs.

This was because of the threat he may unfold a contagious ailment. This contamination is suspected to be fantastically contagious norovirus. They came lower back pumped with an enthusiasm contagious to the rest of the church. they may additionally be examined for contagious diseases.

Learn  more about contagious here brainly.com/question/637002

#SPJ4

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How does the film industry help the local, state, national, and international economy?
AleksandrR [38]

Answer:

On Sunday, March 4th, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences will host the 90th Academy Awards ceremony.

In addition to the event’s glamour and celebrity, the Academy Award season is an opportune time to consider something else about the film/video industry—its value to the U.S. economy, and to a few states in particular.

According to the latest figures from the Arts and Cultural Production Satellite Account (ACPSA), which is produced jointly by the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis and the National Endowment for the Arts, the film and video industry contributed $100 billion to U.S. GDP in 2015, and it employed 390,000 workers. Although the U.S. consistently runs trade deficits, movies/TV shows generate trade surpluses—$11.9 billion in 2015. The full figures for all ACPSA industries will be released this Tuesday, March 6th.

The 2015 figures also reveal a number of interesting facts about the film and video industry (i.e., business establishments that produce and distribute movies and TV shows; movie theaters, cinemas, and film festivals; and companies that provide post-production services such as film restoration):

1) The industry is huge. Film/video production is the third-largest of all ACPSA industries—in 2015, it accounted for 13 percent of all value added by U.S. arts and culture to GDP, ranking just behind arts-related broadcasting and government-produced arts and cultural commodities. The film industry places fourth in ACPSA employment, following arts-related broadcasting, government arts/culture, and the arts retail trade industry.

2) Film/video production is concentrated in California and New York, but also in Louisiana—the only state that approaches the other two by this measure.

The March 2018 release of the ACPSA is the first to include “value-added” figures by industry for each state and the District of Columbia. In California, the film and video industry contributed $49.1 billion to the state’s economy in 2015; in New York, it contributed $28.2 billion.

Value added to Louisiana by the state’s film/video industry was $2.7 billion. At first glance, the figure appears relatively small. As a share of the state’s overall economy, however, it is twice the national average.

Only California and New York show film and video production occupying a larger share of gross state product: in each state, the industry’s value-added is 3.5 times greater than the national index.

3) Six states have witnessed double-digit growth in film and video production. Between 2012 and 2015, value added (unadjusted for inflation) by the film and video industry grew by more than 11 percent in six states: South Carolina (20.1 percent); Connecticut (16.2 percent); Georgia (15.3 percent); Mississippi (13.6 percent); Rhode Island (12.7 percent); and Louisiana (11.7 percent).

4) The U.S. regularly generates a trade surplus in movies and TV shows. This trade surplus, which reached $11.9 billion in 2015, has doubled since 1998. Leading importers of U.S. movies and TV shows are the U.K, Germany, and Canada. In 2015, those three countries, combined, imported nearly $6.9 billion, or 39 percent of all U.S. movie/TV show exports.

Chart showing growth in US movies and TV shows between 1998 and 2015

5) Growth of the web-streaming industry is far outpacing that of the film/video industry. Between 2012 and 2015, average annual growth in real value added by the traditional film/video industry was just 0.2 percent, well below the 2.6 percent growth rate in real value added by all ACPSA industries.

A clue to this slow growth may lie in “other information services,” an industry that consists mainly of web-streaming, web-publishing, and similar services.

Over the three-year period, real value added by other information services grew by an average annual rate of 21 percent—the strongest growth rate, by far, of all ACPSA industries. The popularity of web-streaming services for TV and movies (both in the production and consumption of content) may be eroding the industry’s contribution to GDP.

The traditional broadcasting industry, like film companies, also produces movies and TV shows. In 2015, the film and video industry produced $79.5 billion in gross output of movies and TV programs. The broadcasting industry produced $429 million.

Of the ACPSA’s 35 industries, broadcasting (inclusive of TV and cable networks) generates the greatest value-added. In 2015, broadcasters (excluding sports broadcasts), added $127.8 billion to the U.S. economy. Between 2012 and 2015, average annual growth in arts-related value added by the industry was 2.6 percent, a rate on par with that of total arts and cultural value-added.

Im not 100% sure if this will help but hope it does!

7 0
3 years ago
Provide two examples of state branches using checks and balances. Be sure to include which branches are involved
Nastasia [14]

I hope this helps you and I'm sorry if it doesn't.

Answer:

The Legislative Branch

  • Passing bills
  • Broad taxing and spending power
  • Regulating interstate commerce
  • Controlling the federal budget
  • Borrowing money on the credit of the United States
  • Sole power to declare war and to support and regulate the military
  • Overseeing and making rules for the government and its officers to follow
  • Defining the jurisdiction of the federal judiciary by law in cases not specified by the Constitution
  • Ratifying treaties
  • Sole power of impeachment and trial of impeachments

The Executive Branch (Defined)

  • The President is the commander-in-chief of the armed forces
  • Executes the instructions of Congress
  • May veto bills passed by Congress
  • Executes the spending authorized by Congress
  • Declares states of emergency, publishes regulations and executive orders
  • Makes executive agreements and signs treaties
  • Makes appointments to the federal judiciary, federal executive departments, and other posts
  • Can grant reprieves and pardons for offenses against the United States, except in cases of impeachment.

Extra Info.

I have added a table for more information.

Have a great day!

5 0
3 years ago
A political ""party"" can be thought of as a system of three connected parts. Match the part with the definition. Party in gover
Basile [38]

Explanation:

Party organization

D. A group dedicated to electing the party’s candidates.

The "party" as an "organization" have a established national office and full time staffs of their own. These party are governed by their own sets of rules and laws. They also have party budgets to spend on election campaigns and meetings . The party organization have a dedicated group which pursues electoral victory.

Party in government

B. An alliance of current officeholders cooperating to shape public policy.

The "party in the government" includes elected officials those who represent themselves as  party members (such as President and Congress). These leaders always take part in shaping and framing the public policies.

Party in electorate

A. Those voters who identify with the party and regularly vote for its nominees

The "party in electorate" are people who think themselves as party members but are not officially. These voters or people do not have any party membership cards. These voters regularly influences other to vote and they vote for their nominees.

5 0
3 years ago
As a student, how can you practice the idea of Utilitarianism?
Shalnov [3]
If you go to collage with a butcher lot degree if that’s a choice
4 0
3 years ago
Temple priests held the highest rank in mayan society. true or falsee
Dovator [93]
<span>the answer is TRUE Temple priests held the highest rank in Mayan society.</span>
3 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
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