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Category: 13.04

Bottlenecks and Flows: Media Scholars Consuming Electronic and Televisual Media
Julia Lesage / University of Oregon

December 3, 2010 Julia Lesage / University of Oregon 3 comments

A call to media scholars to begin open and productive conversation about how media are consumed, streamlined, archived, and pedagogically utilized.

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Dan Patrick’s Backstage Musical: Watching Production in the Age of Media Convergence
Harper Cossar / Georgia Gwinnett College

December 3, 2010 Harper Cossar / Georgia Gwinnett College One comment

An examination of the way media convergence is shaping contemporary sports television.

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Fairly Normal Activity: Horror and the Static Camera
Janani Subramanian/ University of Southern California

December 3, 2010 Janani Subramanian / University of Southern California One comment

When “nothing is happening” in Paranormal Activity 1 and 2, the empty room scenes as captured by static cameras in the Paranormal Activity franchise become suspenseful moments of audience reflexivity.

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A ‘Whoniverse’ of Runaway Brides
Hannah Hamad / Massey University

December 3, 2010 Hannah Hamad / Massey University 2 comments

Hamad examines the “runaway bride” trope and its dialectical relationship to femininity as depicted in the UK telefantasy series “Doctor Who.”

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“Asian Enough”: Race, Nation and Misrepresentation
Konrad Ng / University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa

December 3, 2010 Konrad Ng / University of Hawai'i at Mānoa 3 comments

An exploration of Asian American and Canadian representations in popular discourse and Justin Lin’s Better Luck Tomorrow.

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Reduce, Reuse, and Recycle: Glee and Pastiche
Robert Sickels / Whitman College

December 3, 2010 Robert C. Sickels / Whitman College 2 comments

The once-breathlessly pleasurable practice of inserting sly intertextual references may be reaching the point of oversaturation as evidenced by the current season of Fox’s Glee.

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The Anti-Social Network
Tama Leaver / Curtin University

December 3, 2010 Tama Leaver / Curtin University of Technology 10 comments

Dr. Tama Leaver investigates how David Fincher’s The Social Network reflects the nature and sociability of social network users as well as the communication tool’s complex creators.

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flowtv FLOW @flowtv ·
5 Jan

Benjamin M. Han argues that while one might be inclined to identify specific elements of the film that appeal to the global audience, Kpop Demon Hunters prompts us to examine questions of national identity in terms of its Koreanness.

Read it here: http://tinyurl.com/3usj4n4w

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flowtv FLOW @flowtv ·
30 Dec

In "K-pop Beyond the Trend" Dr. Crystal Anderson explores how K-pop music maintains relevance beyond the cultural moment, unlike the fast trending nature of other popular Korean music genres.

Read it here: http://tinyurl.com/bdmx3vfw

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flowtv FLOW @flowtv ·
26 Dec

In "Yet Another KPDH Thought Piece: Socially Conscious and Popular?" Dr. David Oh investigates how Kpop Demon Hunters has managed to maintain its popular status despite the film’s counterhegemonic tendencies.

Read it here: http://tinyurl.com/3tjkm5kt

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flowtv FLOW @flowtv ·
23 Dec

Kallia O. Wright analyzes Dr. Bailey’s heart attack in Grey’s Anatomy, revealing how racial and gender stereotypes shape Black women’s medical treatment and self-advocacy within biased healthcare systems.

Read it here: http://tinyurl.com/3vyahe9b

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