A journal of television and new media

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<p></p><p><em>Everybody Hates Chris</em> and the (Overdue) Return of the Working-Class Sitcom

Everybody Hates Chris and the (Overdue) Return of the Working-Class Sitcom(10)

April 5, 2007

by: Tim Gibson / George Mason University
On Everybody Hates Chris, class issues are largely explored in Chris’s home life, while the show’s writers
use Chris’s travails at Corleone to foreground questions
of race.

<p></p><p>Watching TV Without Pity

Watching TV Without Pity

by: Mark Andrejevic / University of Iowa
Rip-on-your-favorite-show sites elevate the attempt to make bad TV more entertaining to a popular art form. In the Television Without Pity world, the show is no longer the final product, but rather the raw material to which value is added.

<p></p><p>Comics to Film (And Halfway Back Again):  A DVD Essay

Comics to Film (And Halfway Back Again): A DVD Essay

by: Drew Morton / UCLA
By constructing visual essays, cinema and media studies scholars dip their hands into processes they think and write so much about.

<p></p><p>When the Whole World is Watching: The Case of <em>Celebrity Big Brother</em>

When the Whole World is Watching: The Case of Celebrity Big Brother

by: Sarita Malik / Brunel University
Now that we can begin to look back at Celebrity Big Brother in less impulsive, more diagnostic ways, the major upshot – aside from a surefire boost to Shilpa Shetty’s international career following her win –
should be the critical attention paid to Channel 4’s role.


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