: The authors use the show to argue that modern reality mining programs "replay old colonial gold rushes" to celebrate an imagined American past where "white men primarily performed tough work in nature". They contend that shows like Gold Rush obscure the reality of highly-capitalized industrial mining by focusing on "tightly-bonded, enterprising men" taking risks. 2. Transparency and Public Policy
In the reality series , Season 1, Episode 11 is titled " Full Disclosure ". This episode serves as a "tell-all" special where the Hoffman crew discusses their failures. [S1E11] Full Disclosure
: Researchers Sarah Marak and Heike Paul authored a scholarly chapter titled "Feeling Senti-metal: Frontier Nostalgia, Mining Masculinity" . : The authors use the show to argue
If you are looking for a foundational text on the concept of full disclosure, the book (2007) by Archon Fung, Mary Graham, and David Weil is widely cited in political science and governance papers. Transparency and Public Policy In the reality series
: It examines how transparency policies—like nutritional labels or corporate disclosures—can empower citizens but often fail due to "incomplete or irrelevant information".
: "Full disclosure – the biggest flaw?" by Marcus Ranum is a notable critical piece in the journal Network Security .