A journal of television and new media

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Football Talk(3)

December 2, 2005

by: Jim McGuigan / Loughborough University, UK
Jim McGuigan examines why the ubiquitous presence of football chatter in the UK is a crucial source of pleasurable release.

<p></p><p>Broadcasting Is Dead, Long Live Broadcasting

Broadcasting Is Dead, Long Live Broadcasting

by: John McMurria / DePaul University
As Internet companies move towards increasing video content they have begun to look to television as a model. What lessons can be learned from the history of broadcast as Internet/TV convergence gains momentum? In 4 case studies of Internet/TV convergence, the issues of access, fair use and public initiatives are explored and critiqued.

<p></p><p>Speculation with Spoilers

Speculation with Spoilers

by: Jonathan Gray / Fordham University
It is now possible to discover upcoming plot twists in your favorite television series with a little internet research. How does the proliferation of “spoilers” in online fan communities change the way we understand television spectatorship?

<p></p><p>Micro-Ethnographies of the Screen: Flatworld

Micro-Ethnographies of the Screen: Flatworld

by: Dan Leopard / St. Mary’s College of California
In the second part in his discussion of screens in our daily lives, Leopard considers the implicit training and conditioning of ICT’s virtual and miltary-funded Flatworld Project.


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