A journal of television and new media

Tag archive for ‘Global Media’

<p></p><p>Sometimes a kiss is just a kiss: (not) responding to the Richard Gere-Shipla Shetty controversy in India

Sometimes a kiss is just a kiss: (not) responding to the Richard Gere-Shipla Shetty controversy in India

by: Shanti Kumar / University of Texas-Austin
The Indian majority’s non-response to the Gere-Shetty kiss indicates reinforces the notion that diverse cultures in India have known how to live with each other for centuries

<p></p><p> La info-estructura de los 22 portales o sitios ciudadanos de los países

La info-estructura de los 22 portales o sitios ciudadanos de los países

by: Octavio Islas and Arturo Caro / Tecnológico de Monterrey, State of Mexico
Un resumen de los resultados que arrojó el estudio de usabilidad de los 22 portales y sitios web ciudadanos de los países ubicados en la plataforma continental de América. / Results are shown for the usability study done to 22 websites dedicated to citizen information of countries located in the continental platform of America.

<p></p><p>The Open University, Media Studies and New Times

The Open University, Media Studies and New Times

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Insight into how The Open University has changed Media Studies Pedagogy.

<p></p><p>Intellectuals

Intellectuals

by: Toby Miller / University of California, Riverside
Why intellectuals don’t appear very often on U.S. news.

<p></p><p>“AZN Television: The Network for Asian America”

“AZN Television: The Network for Asian America”

by: L. S. Kim / University of California, Santa Cruz
It’s a good time to consider the emergence, significance, and implications of television targeted towards Asian Americans.

<p></p><p>Reflections on Katrina in Brazil

Reflections on Katrina in Brazil

by: Vicki Mayer / Tulane University
Vicki Mayer watches New Orleans endure Hurricane Katrina while on sabbatical in the Amazon.

<p></p><p>Laughs and Legends, or the Furniture that Glows?: Television as History

Laughs and Legends, or the Furniture that Glows?: Television as History

by: John Hartley / Queensland College of Technology
How do we write television as history?

<p></p><p>When Mullahs Ride the Airwaves: Muslim Televangelists and the Saudi Connection

When Mullahs Ride the Airwaves: Muslim Televangelists and the Saudi Connection

by: Nabil Echchaibi / Indiana University-Bloomington
An examination of Irqa’ TV’s role in the promotion of Islam in a post-9/11 media landscape.

<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>Sim City or Dream City? Computer Imaging in the Reconstruction of Iraq

Sim City or Dream City? Computer Imaging in the Reconstruction of Iraq

by: Clare Bratten / Middle Tennessee State University
Technology is affording visual and virtual realization of a new Iraq.

<p></p><p>War, Incendiary Media, and International Law (Part I)

War, Incendiary Media, and International Law (Part I)

by: John Nguyet Erni / City University of Hong Kong
The first of a three part series on media and warfare from a human rights perspective, this column focuses on defining what media/information intervention is.

<p></p><p>Global Television and Multiple Layers of Identity

Global Television and Multiple Layers of Identity

by: Joseph D. Straubhaar / University of Texas-Austin
How do we relate to increased local, regional, national, and global television flows?