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and Ads. Kaiser Family Foundation and Children Now, Apr. 1997. Web. 3 July 2012. From “The Influence of Television on Children’s Gender Role Socialization: A Review of the Literature” (2000) By Susan D. Witt, Ph.D. Regarding gender role development on television, the National Institute of Mental Health has determined: - In male-female interaction, men are usually more dominant. - Men on television are rational, ambitious, smart, competitive, powerful, stable, violent, and tolerant, while women are sensitive, romantic, attractive, happy, warm, sociable, peaceful, fair, submissive, and timid. - For men, the emphasis is on strength, performance, and skill; for women, it is on attractiveness and desirability. - Marriage and family are not important to television’s men. Other findings:- Gender stereotypes occur with frequency on daytime soap operas; women are often shown as hopeless individuals, unable to solve problems witho ut assistance. - A study of Saturday morning cartoons found females were pictured less often than males, were less active than males, played fewer roles than