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Category: 7.06

Watchin’ the Noggin: For-Profit/Non-Profit Co-ventures and Children’s Television

January 31, 2008 Steve Classen / Cal State, Los Angeles 3 comments

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Might hybrid models find further purchase and progressive potentials in media sectors outside the sphere of preschool television?

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The Hidden Cost of Virtual Sociability

January 31, 2008 Aaron Delwiche / Trinity University 5 comments


Virtual worlds enable the formation of vibrant, distributed communities — but what might be the effects?

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1001 Arabian Plights: On Persistent Media Denigration

January 31, 2008 Adel Iskandar / Georgetown University 4 comments


A critical look at the ways in which Arabs and Muslims are represented in American media.

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Pardon the Competition: ESPN Turns Sports Talk Into a Game

January 31, 2008 Harper Cossar / Georgia Gwinnett College 5 comments


How commentary is the new competition on ESPN’s most popular sports talk shows.

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From Irrelevance to On-Demand: Changing Models of Dissemination

January 31, 2008 Karen Hellekson / Independent Scholar 9 comments


Innovative Internet distribution models in music and television strike back against Big Media hegemony.

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What (Public?) Television Was Meant To Be?

January 31, 2008 Joshua Green / MIT 2 comments


PBS, like television, is not a singular object, and the image it constructs of what television is, and what PBS is, is multiplicitous and sometimes contradictory.

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Screen Memories: The Pioneers of Television

January 30, 2008 Joan Hawkins / Indiana University, Bloomington 7 comments


Why do serialized histories of television tend to leave out the most interesting aspects of TV flow?

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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 ·
5 Jan

Benjamin M. Han argues that while one might be inclined to identify specific elements of the film that appeal to the global audience, Kpop Demon Hunters prompts us to examine questions of national identity in terms of its Koreanness.

Read it here: http://tinyurl.com/3usj4n4w

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flowtv FLOW @flowtv ·
30 Dec

In "K-pop Beyond the Trend" Dr. Crystal Anderson explores how K-pop music maintains relevance beyond the cultural moment, unlike the fast trending nature of other popular Korean music genres.

Read it here: http://tinyurl.com/bdmx3vfw

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flowtv FLOW @flowtv ·
26 Dec

In "Yet Another KPDH Thought Piece: Socially Conscious and Popular?" Dr. David Oh investigates how Kpop Demon Hunters has managed to maintain its popular status despite the film’s counterhegemonic tendencies.

Read it here: http://tinyurl.com/3tjkm5kt

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flowtv FLOW @flowtv ·
23 Dec

Kallia O. Wright analyzes Dr. Bailey’s heart attack in Grey’s Anatomy, revealing how racial and gender stereotypes shape Black women’s medical treatment and self-advocacy within biased healthcare systems.

Read it here: http://tinyurl.com/3vyahe9b

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