| A | B |
| audio control engineer | A broadcast technician who regulates the volume and sound quality of radio and television programs and movies |
| audio technology | The technology used to display information so that it can be heard |
| audio/video technology | The technology used to display information so that it can be heard or seen |
| audition | A trial performance given before a person or group of people who are casting a role or filling a position |
| Big Six | The six major movie studios: 20th Century Fox, Warner Bros., Universal Studios, Columbia Pictures, Paramount Pictures, and the Walt Disney Company |
| broadband | A telecommunications technology that can transmit multiple data signals at the same time; usually applied to lines that can transmit at least 1.5 million bits per second |
| broadcast maintenance technician | A broadcast technician who sets up, adjusts, maintains, and repairs electronic broadcasting equipment |
| broadcast technician | A person who sets up, adjusts, and maintains, electronic equipment |
| cable television engineer | An engineer who designs and develops cable television systems |
| commercial art | Art that has a commercial, business purpose |
| correspondent | A journalist who contributes news from a city other than the one in which his or her employer is located |
| curator | A person who is in charge of part or all of a museum |
| darkroom technician | A technician who develops film |
| desktop publishing | The preparation of professional-looking documents on a personal computer |
| fine art | Art that is created primarily to be beautiful |
| freelancer | A self-employed person who provides services for a fee |
| graphic designer | A person who designs images used in brochures, advertisements, corporate logos, menus, books, magazines, annual reports, and other printed documents |
| journalism | The collection and editing of news for presentation through the media |
| lithographic worker | A person who makes the lithographic plates used in the printing process |
| performing art | Art that involves public performance such as dance, theater, and music |
| recording engineer | A broadcast engineer who operates and maintains audio and video recording equipment |
| recording mixer | A broadcast technician who produces movie, television, and radio soundtracks |
| service technician | A cable technician who responds to problems reported by subscribers, repairing amplifiers, cable poles and lines, and correcting electronic malfunctions on the system |
| sound mixer | A broadcast technician who produces movie, television, and radio sound tracks |
| technical illustrator | An illustrator who draws diagrams that show how to maintain, repair and use machines and appliances |
| technical school | A private, postsecondary school that offers a variety of skills-oriented programs, such as courses in telecommunications, technology or computer programming |
| telecommunications | The transmission of voice, data, graphics, and video communications from one place to another |
| video control engineer | A broadcast technician who regulates the fidelity (accuracy), brightness and contrast of images in television broadcasts and movies |
| visual art | Art that is exhibited rather than performed, such as painting, sculpture, and photography |
| webzine | A magazine published on the World Wide Web; also known as an e-zine (electronic magazine) |