A journal of television and new media

Archive for November, 2007

Technofetishized TV: CSI, Bones, and ReGenesis as Science Fiction Television?


Contemporary science fiction series question the bounds of the genre and the rise of infallible technology.

Missing in Time: Madeleine McCann and the Media


How Madeleine went missing in an inundation of media coverage.

Huntsman v. Soderbergh and Copyright Law


How companies such as Cleanflix and Clearplay have led to new interpretations of copyright law and fair use.

Darkly Dreaming of Dexter: If Loving Him Is Wrong I Don’t Want To Be Right

Darkly Dreaming of Dexter: If Loving Him Is Wrong I Don’t Want To Be Right

An analysis of the appeal of the eponymous anti-hero in Showtime’s black comedy/crime drama “Dexter.”

Post-Closet Television


Discusses the changing representations of gay and straight men in “post-closet” network television as well as the ideological implications of this new era.

What Does an American Television Network Look Like?

What Does an American Television Network Look Like?

Television networks’ identities in a new media environment.

Defining Virtual Words: An Emerging Medium Collides With Popular Culture

Defining Virtual Words: An Emerging Medium Collides With Popular Culture

Virtual worlds are becoming increasingly integrated into mainstream popular culture.

Burning Down the House: Community Access TV and the Downtown Art Shows

Burning Down the House: Community Access TV and the Downtown Art Shows

This was alternative media before the Net—a time when late night television was as surreal and real an experience as anyone could hope to have.

All I Want for Christmas is Some Cultural Policy in the Public Interest

All I Want for Christmas is Some Cultural Policy in the Public Interest

The FCC has new plans to consolidate media ownership, but who’s talking about it?

SURF TV

SURF TV

Relationships between depicting “surfing” in television shows and surfing through the Internet and TV.

The Forthcoming DTV Tsunami

The Forthcoming DTV Tsunami

DTV might be the most exciting television advance since the transistor, but it carries with it important implications for democratic communication.

Putting the ‘F’ Back in Art

Putting the ‘F’ Back in Art

A reconsideration of the universality of flatulence-based humor.