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Category: 2.01

This Week on Flow

April 1, 2005 Chris Lucas and Avi Santo / FLOW Staff Leave a comment

by: Chris Lucas and Avi Santo / Coordinating Editors
Welcome to the first issue of Flow Volume 2.

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Pass the Remote!

April 1, 2005 Natalie Cannon, Zak Salih, and Angela Nemecek 8 comments

by: Natalie Cannon, Zak Salih, and Angela Nemecek
HBO’s Carnivale and the valorization of freak culture.

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Television For Swing States

April 1, 2005 Henry Jenkins / Massachusetts Institute of Technology 7 comments

by: Henry Jenkins / Massachusetts Institute of Technology
How television can help to create common ground among citizens.

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Hegemony on a Hard Drive

April 1, 2005 Robert Schrag / North Carolina State University 4 comments

by: Robert Schrag / North Carolina State University
Improving the relationship between the creative impulse and the digital environment.

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Reinventing Public Media

April 1, 2005 Michael Curtin / University of Wisconsin-Madison 6 comments

by: Michael Curtin / University of Wisconsin-Madison
A pragmatic approach to the possibility of media reform

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The Republic of Tyra

April 1, 2005 Anna McCarthy / New York University 6 comments

by: Anna McCarthy / New York University
Who would you rather run the country — Tyra or Simon?

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Where’s the Beef?

April 1, 2005 Daniel Bernardi / Arizona State University 6 comments

by: Daniel Bernardi / Arizona State University
A look at pornography, hate speech, Donna Haraway’s cyborg metaphor, and their relationship to race in America.

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Terrordome

April 1, 2005 Cynthia Fuchs / George Mason University 4 comments

by: Cynthia Fuchs / George Mason University
A consideration of the dynamics of cable cop shows The Shield and Kojak.

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Martha Stewart: Free but Still in Chains?

April 1, 2005 Melissa Click / University of Missouri 6 comments

by: Melissa Click / University of Massachusetts, Amherst
Can Martha Stewart redeem herself through television?

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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

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Over*Flow: “Effort is Overrated: The Dissonance of AI Integrations with the 2024 Olympics”
Kathryn Hartzell / University of Texas at Austin

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Over*Flow: “Martha Stewart’s Star Persona and the 21st-Century Influencer”
Emma Ginsberg / Georgetown University

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flowtv FLOW @flowtv ·
8 Dec

In "The Noise Hits All at Once: A Trans History of the Votrax SC-01 Voice Synthesis Chip" Whit Pow asks what happens when an electronic sound becomes legible as a voice?

Read it here: https://tinyurl.com/4tmt9meu

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10 Nov

Examining South Korea’s rapid economic ascent, Gil-Soo Han reveals how “nouveau-riche nationalism” collides with migrant realities. Centering on the Naju forklift abuse case, he exposes how economic pride and social hierarchy intersect

Read it here: http://tinyurl.com/5ywctjz5

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6 Nov

Golden M. Owens reinterprets Rosey the Robot as a futuristic Mammy figure, linking domestic servitude, robot etymologies, and animation history to show how racialized labor logics persist beneath the surface of family entertainment.

Read it here: http://tinyurl.com/56v38frs

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5 Nov

Anna Lovatt traces how artists from Mimi Smith to Letícia Parente used television and video to redraw the boundaries between art, media, and everyday life. The column reveals how the “screen age” has transformed drawing

Read it here: http://tinyurl.com/3knva3wp

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