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Ludmilka [50]
3 years ago
10

Jordan is catching up on her favorite celebrity's latest social media posts. One of the celebrity's latest updates instructs her

fans to try a seven-day sugar elimination diet to get rid of acne. Jordan decides to try it, but doesn't see any results. Jordan just fell victim to which red flag characteristic?
Social Studies
2 answers:
alexgriva [62]3 years ago
6 0

That is the wrong answer.  It is not fanaticism

LiRa [457]3 years ago
3 0
Normally, that would be described as fad dieting looking for a quick fix to problems. I found a similar question with some choices. Out of those, this describes fanaticism; Being overly concerned with something to the point where you will try anything to get rid of it. This is increased as popular celebs promote it, even if others advise against it. 
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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
Explanation of "I only know that I don't know anything" <br> Pls
Dahasolnce [82]

Answer:

It means that the only thing you know is anything

Explanation:

You don't know anything other than knowing not knowing

I don't know if I explain it clearly

5 0
3 years ago
Question / OT
Nikolay [14]
C. They had no rights under the law
4 0
2 years ago
1. 1931: Flooding in China killed between 2,000,000 and 4,000,000 people.2. 1887: Yellow River floods claimed between 1,000,000
WITCHER [35]

C. The Three Gorges Dam

was built to control the devastating effects of flooding in China.

4 0
3 years ago
Each of the following is a factor that needs to be evaluated for moral intensity except: Group of answer choices a) Degree of so
kumpel [21]

All of the above are relevant factors to be evaluated for moral intensity except

<u>Explanation:</u>

Moral intensity is the intensity of feeling that a person has about the values of a moral choice.

  • The magnitude of the consequences: This is the quantity of the evils forced on the victims of the decision.
  • Social consensus: This is the point of social recognition that an act is either moral or sinful.
  • Proximity: This is the sense of intimacy, either culturally, psychologically, or bodily, that the soul has for the victims of the act in question.
  • The concentration of effect: This is an inverse function of the number of characters hit by an act of any given measure.
7 0
3 years ago
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