<p>I need feedback on those schools...I?m interested in the entertainment industry( maybe management still not sure).which of these school would offer me the best oportunity on the entertainment industry(film,tv,theme parks etc).
BTW i can?t afford Chapman university,LMU,USC...</p>
<p>Pateta,</p>
<p>We will be better able to help you if can tell us what SDSU and CSULB stand for. I assume that FSU stands for Florida State.</p>
<p>sorry...
CSULB= California state university long beach, SDSU=san diego state university</p>
<p>Look at Cal Poly Pomona. I believe they have a major in theme park management that no other Cal State does.</p>
<p>No it doesn?t but thank you for the suggestion.
I found out tha california state university fullerton has a major in entertainment business.any information about CSU fullerton?i know nothing about it?s reputation.
Also i would appreciate some feedback on cal state long beach, san diego state university and CUNY city college.</p>
<p>neither one of you is correct. there is no major in entertainment business in the entire CSU system. fullerton has an entertainment studies program in its college of communication which obviously is not business. pomona started such a program but the new dean there has eliminated almost every such visionary program and sent that school back twenty years and left both faculty and students demoralized. san diego has a graduate sports program, and several CSU campuses have courses but no majors in this field. </p>
<p>the best comprehensive program of any state university in the nation is at the university of south carolina, and i would challenge anybody to prove otherwise.</p>
<p>As for CSU fullerton here is the link <a href="http://business.fullerton.edu/undergraduate/tourism.htm%5B/url%5D">http://business.fullerton.edu/undergraduate/tourism.htm</a></p>
<p>university of south carolina? i thought the best place for a person interested on the entertainment industry would be cali , NY or florida...
Plus i don?t see nothing related to entertainment at USC wbsite <a href="http://mooreschool.sc.edu/moore/undergraduate/prospective/ug-majors.htm%5B/url%5D">http://mooreschool.sc.edu/moore/undergraduate/prospective/ug-majors.htm</a></p>
<p>you might notice that the vast majority of courses at fullerton are NOT from business and does NOT represent a major but rather a concentration.</p>
<p>as for SC you might want to check to see that carolina has an entire COLLEGE dedicated to entertainment and tourism, not a mere emphasis area.</p>
<p>I'm not sure what you're looking for, but FSU has a killer film major. It's very selective, usually with 1,000 applicants and only 25 accepted students, but they pay for all their films and have are a big buzz right now in terms of the Film Industry. If film is what you're looking for, FSU is fantastic.</p>
<p>"as for SC you might want to check to see that carolina has an entire COLLEGE dedicated to entertainment and tourism, not a mere emphasis area."
I didn?t find that...
I was accepted to FSU(not the college of cinema)....i know that i has a top film departament but i?m not focused only in film...plus they don?t offer a bus, with concentration on entertainment.</p>
<p>"you might notice that the vast majority of courses at fullerton are NOT from business and does NOT represent a major but rather a concentration." the school school that has a program fully dedicated to entertainment is fullsail.</p>
<p>I?m looking is a school with a good tv film radio department(or similar like the
CSULB Department of Film and Electronic Arts) and business with at least a concentration in entertainment.</p>
<p>You might want to look at Oklahoma City University's School of American Dance and Arts Management <a href="http://www.okcu.edu/Dance_amgt/%5B/url%5D">http://www.okcu.edu/Dance_amgt/</a></p>
<p>Entertainment business majors must take classes in five separate focus areas: business, arts management, entertainment business, advertising and promotion, and technical theatre. The business core includes management principles, business communications, business statistics, survey of business law, organizational behavior, principles of economics, and elementary accounting. The arts management core includes touring performing arts, presenting & sponsoring performances, management of non-profit art organizations, and contracts & management of performers. The entertainment business core includes introduction to entertainment business and 15 customizable career-related academic electives. The advertising and promotion core includes entertainment marketing, principles of advertising, and public relations writing. The technical theater core includes introduction to technical theater for managers.</p>
<p>OCU does not offer a film major, as far as I know, however, their entertainment business degree is well respected.</p>
<p>Thank you dancersmom!!!</p>