Fights, Camera, Action," explores the controversial popularity of "The Jerry Springer Show" in the '90s.
The Stanford Prison Experiment is possibly the most famous psychological experiment of all time, an insane role-playing game ...
The Stanford Prison Experiment of 1971 is one of the most famous – and infamous – psychological experiments conducted, still discussed in classrooms and pop culture more than half a century on.
In the summer of 1971, Philip Zimbardo, Craig Haney, and Curtis Banks carried out a psychological experiment to test ... or guard in a simulated prison at Stanford University.
Watch it from beginning to end or skip around according to your interests. You probably know that the Stanford Prison ...
You probably know that the Stanford Prison Experiment, which set up a mock prison on the university campus and divided college-student subjects into prisoners and guards, was wildly unethical.
The movie is based on the infamous "Stanford Prison Experiment" conducted in 1971. A makeshift prison is set up in a research lab, complete with cells, bars and surveillance cameras. For two weeks ...
That very ranking is mentioned in the second of two episodes in the documentary Jerry Springer: Fights, Camera, Action, which ...
The show played a big part, “in people not wanting to understand each other, but just shout at each other and fight,” said Luke Sewell, the documentary's director ...
Back in 1971 Phil Zimbardo of Stanford University developed the Stanford Prison Experiment to answer the question of whether moral behavior was determined by situational factors or by internal values.
A constant component of the American character has been a suspicion of leaders who get too big for their britches. Jimmy ...