A journal of television and new media

Archive for March, 2007

<p></p><p>Queering Justin

Queering Justin

by: Hector Amaya / Southwestern University
How does the Justin character on Ugly Betty factor into and complicate debates about queer representations on television?

<p></p><p>Beyond DRM

Beyond DRM

by: John McMurria / DePaul University
With the divide growing between consumer groups, global corporations, government agencies, and end users, there are increasing calls for genuine change in the way digital music is disseminated. Is the time right for compulsory licensing as a viable alternative?

<p></p><p>Sex, Media, Celebrity: A Queer Culture of Media Production

Sex, Media, Celebrity: A Queer Culture of Media Production

by: Adam Fish / UCLA
Subcultures become pop cultures and today’s underground emerges as tomorrow’s mainstream.

<p></p><p>“Why 2008 Won’t Be Like 1984:” Viral Videos and Presidential Politics

“Why 2008 Won’t Be Like 1984:” Viral Videos and Presidential Politics

by: Chuck Tryon / Fayetteville State University
How will voter-created viral videos shape the mediascape of the forthcoming 2008 US Presidential Election?.

<p></p><p>Brand Loyalty vs. show loyalty, the strange case of Virgin vs. Sky

Brand Loyalty vs. show loyalty, the strange case of Virgin vs. Sky

by: Nichola Dobson / Independent Scholar
Caught in between disputing media cable providers, audiences find alternative ways to circumvent the
media’s economically driven programming strategies.

<p></p><p>Seeing is Believing

Seeing is Believing

by: Jennifer Warren / Independent Scholar

Critics of photography envisioned a world where people had consumed the image and thought they had experienced the thing itself. It seems they weren’t far off the mark.

<p></p><p>Why Do I Love Television So Very Much?

Why Do I Love Television So Very Much?

by: Alan McKee / Queensland University of Technology
Why is television my favourite medium, moreso than cinema, radio, even than books? Why does art make me so angry, television so joyful?

<p></p><p>The Crying Game: Why Television Brings Us to Tears

The Crying Game: Why Television Brings Us to Tears

by: David Lavery / Brunel University
On media and the observation that we still have no valid, philosophically sophisticated theory of why we laugh and cry.

<p></p><p>Prime Time Bullies

Prime Time Bullies

by: Gareth Palmer / University of Salford
In programmes ranging from Extreme Makeover to Ten Years Younger our flexible selves are seen to be empowered by experts striving to bring forth ‘the real you.’

<p></p><p>Let Me Tell You—

Let Me Tell You—

by: Craig Jacobsen / Mesa Community College
What’s new, or at least notable by degree, is the attention being given to the portrayal of storytelling within broadcast network programming.

<p></p><p>Network Television’s Ongoing Struggle with Web-based Television

Network Television’s Ongoing Struggle with Web-based Television

by: Ray Cha / Independent Scholar
Peers accepted, provide online channels for established media.

<p></p><p>Women are from Mars? Part 2

Women are from Mars? Part 2

by: Lynne Joyrich / Brown University
How does–or should–narrative television deal with issues of sexual violence? Lynne Joyrich considers the meaning of rape on Veronica Mars…and in our culture as a whole.