Watchin’ the Noggin: For-Profit/Non-Profit Co-ventures and Children’s Television
Might hybrid models find further purchase and progressive potentials in media sectors outside the sphere of preschool television?
A Critical Forum on Media and Culture
A Critical Forum on Media and Culture
Might hybrid models find further purchase and progressive potentials in media sectors outside the sphere of preschool television?
If television viewers are not able to use that medium to gain access to the content they want when they want it, then the medium itself can only continue to make itself an increasingly irrelevant part of that viewer’s media lifestyle.
Read moreHow has the cult television program Battlestar Galactica been conceived, generated, produced, and reproduced? An introduction to the questions of textuality and technology, history and futuricity, production and reception, love and aggression that are addressed in this special issue.
Read moreThinking about the wiki as fundamentally generative brings the Battlestar Wiki much closer to fanfic and other the creative endeavors classified traditionally as “female fan initiated.”
Read moreDespite its influence, radio often remains marginal to media studies.
Read moreTelevision is learning that its offspring can be most fruitful when, like Hera, they’re orphaned: disseminated outside their biologically, technologically, and patriarchally authorized families and adopted by their audiences.
Read moreDue to both its location and characters, Angel can be viewed as politically progressive commentary on immigration.
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How Madeleine went missing in an inundation of media coverage.
Virtual worlds are becoming increasingly integrated into mainstream popular culture.
Relationships between depicting “surfing” in television shows and surfing through the Internet and TV.
Read moreThe slacker heroes of Chuck and Psych may have more in common than would first appear.
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