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A Critical Forum on Media and Culture

A Critical Forum on Media and Culture

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Category: 7.02

What Does an American Television Network Look Like?

November 16, 2007 Joshua Green / MIT 3 comments

Television networks’ identities in a new media environment.

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Defining Virtual Words: An Emerging Medium Collides With Popular Culture

November 16, 2007 Aaron Delwiche / Trinity University 2 comments

Virtual worlds are becoming increasingly integrated into mainstream popular culture.

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Burning Down the House: Community Access TV and the Downtown Art Shows

November 13, 2007 Joan Hawkins / Indiana University, Bloomington 3 comments

This was alternative media before the Net—a time when late night television was as surreal and real an experience as anyone could hope to have.

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All I Want for Christmas is Some Cultural Policy in the Public Interest

November 9, 2007 Jennifer Holt / UCSB 3 comments

The FCC has new plans to consolidate media ownership, but who’s talking about it?

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SURF TV

November 9, 2007 Steve Classen / Cal State, Los Angeles 2 comments

Relationships between depicting “surfing” in television shows and surfing through the Internet and TV.

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The Forthcoming DTV Tsunami

November 9, 2007 Mitchell Szczepanczyk / Chicago Media Action 5 comments

DTV might be the most exciting television advance since the transistor, but it carries with it important implications for democratic communication.

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Putting the ‘F’ Back in Art

November 9, 2007 Shelley Jenkins / Cal-State Fullerton 4 comments

A reconsideration of the universality of flatulence-based humor.

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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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FLOW
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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