Skip to content

Flow

A Critical Forum on Media and Culture

A Critical Forum on Media and Culture

  • Home
  • ABOUT FLOW
  • CONTRIBUTE
    • How to Contribute
    • CURRENT CALLS
  • CREDITS
    • AUTHORS
    • EDITORIAL TEAM
    • TECHNICAL CREDITS
    • FORMER EDITORS
  • OVER*FLOW

Category: 11.12

Sweatin’ Out the Shame
Lucas Hilderbrand / University of California, Irvine

April 23, 2010 Lucas Hilderbrand / University of California, Irvine 8 comments

A look at classic VHS workout tapes.

Read more

Oh My, What Big Ambitions You Have!: ABC’s 1965 Revision of “Little Red Riding Hood”
Quinn Miller / Hampshire College

April 23, 2010 Quinn Miller / University of Oregon 2 comments

An examination of “The Dangerous Christmas of Red Riding Hood—or Oh Wolf, Poor Wolf” and its role in the camp sensibility emerging within U.S. media culture in the mid-1960s.

Read more

Introduction to Oogabooga Studies
David Parry / University of Texas, Dallas

April 23, 2010 David Parry / University of Texas, Dallas 5 comments

As a follow-up to discussions of the “new” and “media” aspects of “new media” studies, Parry proposes the name “Oogabooga Studies” to ameliorate the overuse of the phrase “new media.”

Read more

The Return of the Digital Native: Interfaces, access, and racial difference in District 9
Kevin Hamilton & Lisa Nakamura / University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign

April 23, 2010 Kevin Hamilton / University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign 2 comments

An analysis of “digital natives” and similar representations within science fiction films.

Read more

Tiger! Tiger! Burning Bright
David L. Andrews / University of Maryland

April 23, 2010 David L. Andrews / University of Maryland 6 comments

A look at the (crumbling) star identity of Tiger Woods.

Read more

Bing: An Illiterate Cure for Search Overload
Daren C. Brabham and 
Annie Brabham / University of Utah

April 23, 2010 Daren C. Brabham and 
Annie Brabham / University of Utah 5 comments

A consideration of how the search engine Bing “decides” for its users.

Read more

An Empty Set
Meghan Sutherland / Oklahoma State University

April 23, 2010 Meghan Sutherland / Oklahoma State University 6 comments

A consideration of theoretical applications to the apparatus of television against the presence of cable signal frequency

Meghan Sutherland / Oklahoma State University

Read more
Flow is a critical forum on media and culture published by the Department of Radio-Television-Film at the University of Texas at Austin. Flow’s mission is to provide a space where scholars and the public can discuss media histories, media studies, and the changing landscape of contemporary media.

Search Flow:

Archives

Over*Flow: Responses to Breaking TV & Media News

Over*Flow: “It’s Not Steroids, It’s Testosterone!”: Deconstructing Gender and Sex in Bros (2022)
Lauren Herold / Kenyon College and Nicole Erin Morse / Florida Atlantic University

"Blonde is a Kind of Person": A Cultural History of the Dumb Blonde
Kelly Coyne / Northwestern University

@FlowTV Conversations…

FLOW Follow

A critical forum on media and culture brought to you by the graduate students of @UTRTF.

FlowTV
Retweet on Twitter FLOW Retweeted
flowtv FLOW @flowtv ·
21 Nov

@rahul_mukh explores the infrastructures and services underpinning the shift to mobile streaming in India. Discover more here: https://www.flowjournal.org/2023/11/streaming-indias-neomobile-audiences/

Reply on Twitter 1727001424955944979 Retweet on Twitter 1727001424955944979 4 Like on Twitter 1727001424955944979 5 Twitter 1727001424955944979
flowtv FLOW @flowtv ·
25 Nov

In the final column of Flow 30.2, Lauren Steimer discusses the unacknowledged dangers of on-set stunt work. Read more here: https://www.flowjournal.org/2023/11/accident-the-true-dangers-of-stunt-work/

Reply on Twitter 1728450975763939368 Retweet on Twitter 1728450975763939368 2 Like on Twitter 1728450975763939368 1 Twitter 1728450975763939368
flowtv FLOW @flowtv ·
24 Nov

Maggie Rossman's look at audience reception of the film Barbie demonstrates that even simplistic feminist discourse can lead to complicated affective responses. Read the article here: https://www.flowjournal.org/2023/11/becoming-the-barbie-spectator/

Reply on Twitter 1728093620656627793 Retweet on Twitter 1728093620656627793 10 Like on Twitter 1728093620656627793 24 Twitter 1728093620656627793
flowtv FLOW @flowtv ·
23 Nov

This year (and all years), Flow is thankful for the hard work of our columnists, who share their exciting scholarship with us, and our @UTRTF grad student volunteers, without whom our issues would never be published. Thanks to all who support Flow! Read the latest issue here:

FLOW @FlowTV

This issue has everything — OTT infrastructure, sports management, stunt labor, speculative design, and Barbie! Check out the fantastic articles by @Courtney_BD, @rahul_mukh, Branden Buehler, Brianna Dym, Margaret Rossman, and Lauren Steimer here: http://flowjournal.org

Reply on Twitter 1727748849270182069 Retweet on Twitter 1727748849270182069 1 Like on Twitter 1727748849270182069 6 Twitter 1727748849270182069
Load More

Popular Posts

  • The Devil in the Details: User Tracking Is Hurting More Than Our Privacy, It’s Doing Serious Damage to Public-Interest Media, Too.
    Josh Braun / UMass Amherst
    February 22, 2019 259 comments
  • Pass the Remote: Online News

    June 10, 2005 189 comments
  • Legal Fictions

    June 10, 2005 131 comments
  • Why Do I Love Television So Very Much?

    March 9, 2007 100 comments
  • Watching Everybody Hates Chris in Brazil
    Reighan Gillam / University of Michigan
    March 5, 2013 93 comments

Tags

Advertising American Politics Branding Comedy Commercial Interests Communication Technology COVID-19 Criticism Family Fandom Femininity Feminism Gender Globalization Global Media Global Politics Industry Media Influence Music Netflix New Media News Over*Flow Pedagogy Pop Culture Public Media Race/Ethnicity Radio Reality TV Representation social media streaming Technology Television UK Viewing Volume 23 Volume 24 Volume 25 volume 26 Volume 27 Volume 28 Volume 29 Whiteness Youth Culture