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A Critical Forum on Media and Culture

A Critical Forum on Media and Culture

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Author: Rochelle Rodrigo / Mesa Community College

TVS 101: Teaching an Online Intro to Television Course
Shelley Rodrigo / Mesa Community College

July 24, 2008 Rochelle Rodrigo / Mesa Community College 2 comments

A discussion of the possibilities of an online introduction to television course.

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TVS 101: Television Outside the Box
Rochelle Rodrigo / Mesa Community College

June 9, 2008 Rochelle Rodrigo / Mesa Community College 4 comments

A discussion of teaching an “Introduction to Television” course.

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Adapting to DVRing: Narrative Franchises and Advertising

Rochelle Rodrigo / Mesa Community College

May 7, 2008 Rochelle Rodrigo / Mesa Community College 3 comments

Advertising that urges you to stop fast-forwarding through commercials in order to keep up with transforming narrative franchises.

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Uncle Stevie vs. Aca-Fan: What CopyBlogger can teach us about Popular Scholarship

February 27, 2008 Rochelle Rodrigo / Mesa Community College 4 comments

The Tudors, Henry Jenkins, and going big: making scholarship accessible to a popular audience.

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Technofetishized TV: CSI, Bones, and ReGenesis as Science Fiction Television?

November 16, 2007 Rochelle Rodrigo / Mesa Community College 9 comments


Contemporary science fiction series question the bounds of the genre and the rise of infallible technology.

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Playing in the Technological Sandbox

May 26, 2006 Rochelle Rodrigo / Mesa Community College 2 comments

by: Rochelle Rodrigo / Mesa Community College
On the value of “play” in the course of implementing new technologies in the classroom.

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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

Over*Flow: “'It's Not Dark Humor If It's Not Your Trauma - You're Just Bad People': The Exploitive Nature of TikTok Meme Cultures
Moa Eriksson Krutrök / Umeå University, Sweden

Over*Flow: The Costs of Hope in The Chair and The Bold Type
Kelly Coyne / Northwestern University

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2h

Cara Dickason examines how corporations sell Smart TVs as domestic surveillance technologies through gendered formulas. @CaraDickason

Read the full article here:
https://www.flowjournal.org/2022/05/smart-tv-surveillance/

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23 May

Isabel Molina-Guzmán discusses how Bridgerton's escapist narrative produces a nostalgia that simultaneously erases histories of racial conflict, generates pleasure in non-white audiences, and maintains white subjectivity. @LaProfaMolina

Read more at:
https://www.flowjournal.org/2022/05/bridgertons-romance-with-racial-nostalgia/

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20 May

Sarah E.S. Sinwell details how one art house cinema continues to adapt to the pandemic while serving its local community. @sinwelleffect

Read more at:
https://www.flowjournal.org/2022/05/portrait-of-an-art-house-during-a-pandemic-part-2/

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