The images of America exported by entertainment and information media companies have created very high expectations in foreign audiences. Some recipients overhearing American media want to immigrate to the US and/or study in Western universities. In the process, a few of them encounter difficulties deceiving their high expectations. Their frustrations have been exploited by some fanatic ideologues for their own agendas, resulting in anti-American terrorism. The American media should be aware of the unintended consequences of their global exhibition of media, and more careful attention should be given to the way immigrants or graduate students sojourning in the US live their day-to-day encounters.

PAGES
295 – 300
DOI
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Issues
Also in this issue:
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Do AIs have politics? Thinking about ChatGPT through the work of Langdon Winner
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Creating value through service innovation: an effectual design thinking framework
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Health and medical researchers are willing to trade their results for journal impact factors: results from a discrete choice experiment
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The death and resurrection of manuscript submission systems
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Ryan Jenkins, David Černý and Tomáš Hříbek (eds) Autonomous Vehicle Ethics: The Trolley Problem and Beyond
Is there a Bin Laden in the Audience? Considering the Events of September 11 as a Possible Boomerang Effect of the Globalization of US Mass Communication
Original Articles