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A Critical Forum on Media and Culture

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Category: 7.05

Therapy is Complicated: HBO’s Foray into Modular Storytelling with In Treatment

January 29, 2008 Tasha Oren / UW-Milwaukee 3 comments

Based on a hit Israeli TV show, HBO’s In Treatment, about a therapist and his patients, invites viewers to mix and match their own viewing schedules.

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Revisitations and Constant Auditions: The Politics of Placing People

January 29, 2008 Anna Beatrice Scott / University of California, Riverside 4 comments

How do we reward and protect creative labor while we insist on stripping it from the bodies that produce it?

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Where Babies Really Come From…

January 29, 2008 Tim Havens / University of Iowa 4 comments

A Baby Story, it would seem, has become a present-day ritual for at least some segments of the expectant-parent population in the U.S.

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The Anachronism of Television Subscription Packages

January 29, 2008 John W. Jordan / UW-Milwaukee 3 comments

If television viewers are not able to use that medium to gain access to the content they want when they want it, then the medium itself can only continue to make itself an increasingly irrelevant part of that viewer’s media lifestyle.

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Is it Religion or is it Entertainment?

January 17, 2008 Mara Einstein / Queens College 5 comments

Exploring the blur between the sacred and the secular in current media.

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On the Relevancy of Radio

January 16, 2008 Kathleen Battles / Oakland University 5 comments

Despite its influence, radio often remains marginal to media studies.

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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.

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Over*Flow: Responses to Breaking TV & Media News

Classifying Dahmer: Protecting Netflix’s Homonormative Canon
Dan Vena / Queen’s University & Sarah Woodstock / University of Toronto

"I’m the Industry Baby”: The Political Economy of Lil Nas X
Wendy Peters / Nipissing University

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FlowTVFLOW@FlowTV·
27 Jan

New to Over*Flow: Dan Vena and Sarah Woodstock argue that Netflix’s removal of Dahmer – Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story from its LGBTQ TV category discards “unacceptable” queer history and protects the homonormativity of Netflix’s LGBTQ library.
https://www.flowjournal.org/2023/01/overflow-classifying-dahmer/

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FlowTVFLOW@FlowTV·
21 Jan

Check out this call for papers from our colleagues! 10 days until submissions are due.

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FlowTVFLOW@FlowTV·
13 Jan

Hey folks! We are officially extending this CFP until Sunday, January 15

Looking forward to reading your submissions!

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