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A Critical Forum on Media and Culture

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A Critical Forum on Media and Culture

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Tim Anderson / Denison University

Could You Feel Like They Feel?: Music Games, Listening and Fantasies of Identification
Tim Anderson / Denison University

February 23, 2007 Tim Anderson / Denison University One comment

by: Tim Anderson / Denison University
The euphoria of being the rock star and the music.

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Passion is No Ordinary Word

November 17, 2006 Tim Anderson / Denison University 2 comments

by: Tim Anderson / Denison University
Flow, the conference, worked for the same reason that the online journal does: it simply doesn’t feel careerist in any conventional way, shape or form.

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At the End of the Day We’re all “End Users”

July 28, 2006 Tim Anderson / Denison University One comment

by: Tim Anderson / Denison University
Reflections on audio-vidual media’s entrance into the world of the “end user.”

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“New Media”? Please Define.

May 12, 2006 Tim Anderson / Denison University 5 comments

by: Tim Anderson / Denison University
New gaming systems are acting as sites of hyper-convergence for media. But is media convergence all that “new”? Should we be reconsidering the “new” in “new media”?

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“TV Time” is Now the New “Playtime”

March 10, 2006 Tim Anderson / Denison University 2 comments

by: Tim Anderson / Denison University
Television downloads and editing software create new possibilities in television consumption.

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Let’s Get Small: The Year When the Record Industry Broke and Listeners Became Crazy, Mixed Up, Downloading, File-Sharing Freaks

January 13, 2006 Tim Anderson / Denison University 2 comments

by: Tim Anderson / Denison University
As digital music sources expanded both their catalogues and user bases in 2005, music distribution continues its shift from the record store to the download store.

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Television and the Work of Mourning

November 4, 2005 Tim Anderson / Denison University 3 comments

by: Tim Anderson / Denison University
How do we cope with the loss of our favorite television shows?

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How Much Do I Love myTunes? Allow Me to List the Ways…

September 9, 2005 Tim Anderson / Denison University 5 comments

by: Tim Anderson / Denison University
With the proliferation of mp3 players, CD burners and cheap CD-Rs the art of the mix is practiced now more than ever.

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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

@FlowTV Conversations…

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A critical forum on media and culture brought to you by the graduate students of @UTRTF.

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flowtv FLOW @flowtv ·
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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flowtv FLOW @flowtv ·
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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flowtv FLOW @flowtv ·
4 Nov

In his analysis of K-Pop Demon Hunters, Dal Yong Jin challenges theories of “odorless” hybridity, arguing for a politicized model of cultural mixing that keeps local specificity visible while negotiating unequal global media power.

Read it here: http://tinyurl.com/2xft2667

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Popular Posts

  • Pass the Remote: Online News

    June 10, 2005 179 comments
  • Why Do I Love Television So Very Much?

    March 9, 2007 95 comments
  • Watching Everybody Hates Chris in Brazil
    Reighan Gillam / University of Michigan
    March 5, 2013 92 comments
  • Awkward Conversations About Uncomfortable Laughter

    November 4, 2005 67 comments
  • Why Don’t I Like Breaking Bad?
    Kate Warner / University of Queensland
    February 11, 2014 60 comments

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