A journal of television and new media

Tag archive for ‘Normality’

<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>Prime Time Bullies

Prime Time Bullies

by: Gareth Palmer / University of Salford
In programmes ranging from Extreme Makeover to Ten Years Younger our flexible selves are seen to be empowered by experts striving to bring forth ‘the real you.’

<p></p><p>Spouse Exchanges: I Know the Perfect People …

Spouse Exchanges: I Know the Perfect People …

by: Megan Mullen / University of Wisconsin-Parkside
Is the families selecting process to participate in reality TV showing American entertainment preferences? Are you and your family eligible?

<p></p><p>When I Grow Up I Want to Be a Boy: <em>Transgeneration</em>’s Meditation on the “Real”

When I Grow Up I Want to Be a Boy: Transgeneration’s Meditation on the “Real”

by: Shana Agid / Sarah Lawrence College
Thoughts on Transgeneration and TV’s quest to create a viable “normal” transgender person.

Micro-Ethnographies of the Screen: The Supermarket

by: Dan Leopard / University of Southern California
Dan Leopard considers the screens we ignore as we shop for food.

<p></p><p>Celebrity Nepotism, Family Values and E! Television

Celebrity Nepotism, Family Values and E! Television

by: Diane Negra / University of East Anglia
A closer look at families, wealth and Filthy Rich Cattle Drive.

<p></p><p>Pass the Remote!

Pass the Remote!

by: Natalie Cannon, Zak Salih, and Angela Nemecek
HBO’s Carnivale and the valorization of freak culture.

<p></p><p> The Republic of Tyra

The Republic of Tyra

by: Anna McCarthy / New York University
Who would you rather run the country — Tyra or Simon?

I’m A Celebrity – Analyse Me: The Appeal of Celebrity Reality TV

by: Kirsty Fairclough / University of Salford, UK
What celebrity reality TV offers as opposed to its celebrity-constructing counterpart is not the transformation of the “ordinary” person into the “extraordinary,” but the opposite trajectory.