A journal of television and new media

Archive for June, 2005

<p></p><p>This Issue on <i>Flow</i> (24 June 2005)

This Issue on Flow (24 June 2005)

by: Elliot Panek / FLOW Staff
Welcome to Issue 7.

<p></p><p>Discovering the Art of Television’s Endings

Discovering the Art of Television’s Endings

by: Jane Feuer / University of Pittsburgh
A consideration of the aesthetics of the television season finale.

<p></p><p>Flowers Powers: Mars or Venus?

Flowers Powers: Mars or Venus?

by: John Hartley/ Queensland University of Technology
Is media studies in need of planetary realignment? Or, how learning to appreciate Benny Hill might solve the Fiske/McChesney divide.

<p></p><p>TV Down Under

TV Down Under

by: Jim McGuigan / Loughborough University, UK
Is Austrialian television closer to American or British TV?

<p></p><p>Some Good News about the News: 5 Reasons Why ‘Fake’ News is Better than Fox ‘News’

Some Good News about the News: 5 Reasons Why ‘Fake’ News is Better than Fox ‘News’

by: Brian Ott / Colorado State University
There is no more destructive, deleterious, and dangerous institution in society today than the mainstream news media.

<p></p><p>What Do We Want from TV Studies?

What Do We Want from TV Studies?

by: Sharon Ross / Columbia College Chicago
On a practical level, how do we as scholars, teachers, and activists manage to address the many facets of TV today? What do we want from TV Studies?

<p></P><p>If We Are So Smart….

If We Are So Smart….

by: Frederick Wasser / Brooklyn College
How can media studies address television’s impact on contemporary politics? A further consideration of the political economy/cultural studies debate.

<p></p><p>This issue on Flow (10 June 2005)

This issue on Flow (10 June 2005)

by: Susan R. Pearlman / FLOW Staff
Welcome to Issue 6.

<p></p><p>Evaluation, Analysis, Reform, and the Peabody Awards

Evaluation, Analysis, Reform, and the Peabody Awards

by: Horace Newcomb / University of Georgia
On the purpose of media studies and the many guises of reform.

<p></p><p>Pass the Remote:  Online News

Pass the Remote: Online News

by: Elliot Panek, Kristen Grant and Elaine Baumgartel
Considering the internet as a primary news source.

<p></p><p>Four Strategies for Media Reform

Four Strategies for Media Reform

by: Michael Curtin / University of Wisconsin-Madison
Four concrete suggestions for reforming media.

<p></p><p>Why Fiske Still Matters

Why Fiske Still Matters

by: Henry Jenkins / Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Despite Aniko Bodroghkozy’s claim that McChesney “rules”, Fiske still matters.