A journal of television and new media

Tag archive for ‘Domesticity’

<p></p><p>I Lost my Wife to Facebook,  and Other Myths that Might be True

I Lost my Wife to Facebook, and Other Myths that Might be True

by: Michele Byers / Saint Mary’s University
Facebook anyone? Looking to the online community, Facebook, the author considers how nostalgia and irony simultaneously figure into this current trend.

<p></p><p>Children Playing in Hollywood

Children Playing in Hollywood

by: Judith Halberstam / University of Southern California
Let’s see how Little Children manages to sneak normativity into the plot as resolution for the problem of the community enforcement of …normativity!

<p></p><p>Trauma Time: Family, Community and Criminality in <em>Close to Home</em>

Trauma Time: Family, Community and Criminality in Close to Home

by: Diane Negra / University of East Anglia
How CBS’ Close to Home redefines motherhood, community and family values.

<p></p><p>TV Revisiting TV: Why TV Does the “Remake” Better than Movies Do

TV Revisiting TV: Why TV Does the “Remake” Better than Movies Do

by: Sharon Ross / Columbia College Chicago
How film remakes TV, and how TV remakes TV, too.

<p></p><p>Marriage as the New Trend

Marriage as the New Trend

by: Moya Luckett / New York University
Marriage and motherhood seem to be both desirable and scarce for women in today’s current television programs. Examples are found in such shows as Desperate Housewives, My Fair Brady, Breaking Bonaduce and others.

<p></p><p>Desperate Citizens

Desperate Citizens

by: John McMurria / DePaul University
Extreme Makeover Home Edition contestants are portrayed as good and deserving citizens who are the victims of misfortunes beyond their control. However, while EMHE helps these deserving citizens, the corporate sponsored show fails to recognize the irony inherent in the fact that it is these very corporations that contribute to these problems in the first place.

<p></p><p>I Love Lucy in the Sixties

I Love Lucy in the Sixties

by: Heather Hendershot / Queens College
How are our televisual memories and self-perceptions challenged when we revisit the shows of our youth?