Primetime Gametime
Steven Boyer / University of Glasgow
Steven Boyer investigates the failure of Microsoft’s Primetime.
Read moreA Critical Forum on Media and Culture
A Critical Forum on Media and Culture
Steven Boyer investigates the failure of Microsoft’s Primetime.
Read moreAlfred L. Martin, Jr., works toward a theory of compound otherness on television.
Read moreWheeler Winston Dixon considers the ubiquity of Redbox kiosks and their implications for the DVD market.
Read moreA look at who actually benefits from body-conscious television spectacles like Extreme Makeover.
Read moreHollis Griffin examines Sarah Palin’s discourse of conservative Americana.
Read moreA discussion of online farming community Free Farm Game and its implications of online and offline agriculture and capitalism.
Read moreSteven Boyer explores the ways in which television is being changed by gaming consoles. Boyer examines the ways television is remaining the same, but asserts that it’s the way we’re watching is that is changing.
Read moreA look at the portrayal of teenage sexuality and objectification on Pretty Little Liars.
Read moreLife in a Day relies on the labor of the “crowd” to achieve its groundbreaking achievement, but fails to provide fair compensation to the members of the crowd willing to share the products of their creative labor.
Read moreA look into the construction of gender, intelligence and sexuality on the CBS sitcom The Big Bang Theory
Read moreJessalynn Keller’s Flow Favorite: Alexander Doty’s column on the 2010 Emmy broadcast reveals the tensions of a liberal politics of representation in the shows Glee and Modern Family.
Read moreAlfred Martin’s Flow Favorite: Randall Livingstone challenges the myth behind the “Get a Mac” ads.
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