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Category: 2.06

This issue on Flow (10 June 2005)

June 10, 2005 Susan R. Pearlman / FLOW Staff Leave a comment

by: Susan R. Pearlman / FLOW Staff
Welcome to Issue 6.

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Evaluation, Analysis, Reform, and the Peabody Awards

June 10, 2005 Horace Newcomb / University of Georgia 3 comments

by: Horace Newcomb / University of Georgia
On the purpose of media studies and the many guises of reform.

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Pass the Remote: Online News

June 10, 2005 Elliot Panek, Kristen Grant and Elaine Baumgartel 198 comments

by: Elliot Panek, Kristen Grant and Elaine Baumgartel
Considering the internet as a primary news source.

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Four Strategies for Media Reform

June 10, 2005 Michael Curtin / University of Wisconsin-Madison 4 comments

by: Michael Curtin / University of Wisconsin-Madison
Four concrete suggestions for reforming media.

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Why Fiske Still Matters

June 10, 2005 Henry Jenkins / Massachusetts Institute of Technology 9 comments

by: Henry Jenkins / Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Despite Aniko Bodroghkozy’s claim that McChesney “rules”, Fiske still matters.

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Embodied

June 10, 2005 Cynthia Fuchs / George Mason University 3 comments

by: Cynthia Fuchs / George Mason University
A consideration of the various uses of mediums in the new Patricia Arquette series Medium.

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Benny Hill and Reviving British Comedy

June 10, 2005 Anna McCarthy / New York University 7 comments

by: Anna McCarthy / New York University
Why the recent interest in British comedy? McCarthy examines the BBC’s Benny Hill Show marathon, Little Britain, and The Office.

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Digital: The Dark Side

June 10, 2005 Robert Schrag / North Carolina State University 3 comments

by: Robert Schrag / North Carolina State University
How digital creative tools blur the lines between fantasy and reality, creation and cutting-and-pasting, and why that might not be such a good thing.

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Legal Fictions

June 10, 2005 Eric M. Greenfield 163 comments

by: Eric M. Greenfield
What the law has to say about the distortion of character that is a staple of fact-based entertainment.

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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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