With its reliance on speculation, dependence on simulation, and occasional swerves into absurdity, CNN's coverage of Malaysia Airlines 370 indexes the incomprehensibility of this disaster, marked by the failures of so many systems that seemed to promise safety, visibility, and order.
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Tags: cable news, CNN, journalism, Malaysia Airlines, Malaysia Airlines Flight 370, technology, television, TV
Posted in Global, Perspectives, Technology, Technology, TV, TV | Comments Off on Only Marginally More Unreal: Reconsidering CNN’s Coverage of Malaysia Airlines 370
Ten (or more) media industry news items you might have missed recently.
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Tags: Aereo, Arrested Development, China, copyright, Deanna Durbin, Dreamworks, George Jones, Google Glass, IllumiRoom, Iron Man 3, Netflix, neurogaming, Ray Harryhausen, Steven Soderbergh, The Onion, Xbox, YouTube
Posted in Celebrity/Stardom, Celebrity/Stardom, Current Events, Film, Film, Games, Games, Global, Global, Industry, Industry, Internet, Internet, Music, Music, Politics, Politics, Technology, Technology, TV, TV, What Are You Missing? | Comments Off on What Are You Missing? Apr 28 – May 11
The sale of U.S. cable station Current TV to the Qatar-based news network Al Jazeera raises questions about how a foreign network might explain Americans to themselves. Might Al Jazeera provide a foreign lens for Americans to examine themselves? What would that even look like?
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Tags: Al Gore, Al Jazeera, Antoine Berman, cable television, Current TV, Daily Show, Danny Schechter, Fox News, Qatar
Posted in Current Events, Global, Industry, Politics, TV | Comments Off on Current TV, Al Jazeera America, and the Experience of the Foreign
If the opening ceremony for the 2012 Olympics was full of sound and fury, the closing ceremony signified nothing.
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Tags: Britain, London Olympics, media events, Olympics 2012
Posted in Current Events, Global | 1 Comment »
For all intents, the Britishness that gets replaced with Englishness in the ceremony promises to be a specific kind of Englishness.
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Tags: Britain, London Olympics, media events, Olympics 2012
Posted in Current Events, Global | 1 Comment »
Carly Rae Jepsen's Justin Bieber-supported breakthrough offers a case study for how difficult it is for stardom to remain transnational when moving into the U.S. market.
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Tags: Call Me Maybe, canada, Carly Rae Jepsen, Justin Bieber, music, Scooter Braun, stardom
Posted in Celebrity/Stardom, Global, Music | 4 Comments »
If we think of efforts by “American” entities to access “Indian American” spaces of culture, capital labor, and belonging as symptomatic of emergent modalities of the transnational, might we be able to see subtle shifts in the discourse of multiculturalism in the contemporary moment?
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Tags: advertising, Asian American markets, desi, ethnic segmentation, India, Indian Americans, Indian TV, Multicultural advertising, multiculturalism, Satellite channels, Star TV
Posted in Current Events, Global, Global, Industry, Industry, Perspectives, TV, TV | 1 Comment »
The ACTA retreat is indicative of a larger crisis in how media policy works today. Specifically: we have no idea how media policy works today.
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Tags: acta, copyright, intellectual property, policy, policy sphere, policymaking
Posted in Global, Global, Industry, Industry, Internet, Internet, Perspectives, Politics, Politics, Technology, Technology | 3 Comments »
The rescue of a group of Chilean miners this week has become a media phenomenon. We want your opinion on it all.
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Tags: Chilean mine rescue
Posted in Current Events, Global, Global, Industry, Industry, Internet, Internet, Perspectives, Print, Print, Technology, Technology, TV, TV, What Do You Think? | 1 Comment »
Last night, the Banksy-directed opening credit sequence “couch gag” for The Simpsons took us into the sweatshop behind the franchise. As executive producer Al Jean noted, “This is what you get when you outsource.”
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Tags: Al Jean, Banksy, credit sequence, FOX, opening credits, production, race/ethnicity, sweatshop, The Simpsons
Posted in Current Events, Global, Industry, TV | 20 Comments »
As the media hand-wringing continues over whether Rev. Terry Jones's Quran book-burning stunt deserved so much media attention, commentators miss the more important points about this episode and its relationship to contemporary political culture.
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Tags: Fox News, fundamentalism, Quran, right-wing, Terry Jones
Posted in Current Events, Global, Politics | 1 Comment »
International audiences seem to dig Jake Gyllenhaal’s abs more than Americans do – but is that enough to save the Prince of Persia film franchise?
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Tags: box office, film franchise, Prince of Persia, sequels
Posted in Current Events, Film, Global, Industry | 2 Comments »
The information and communication technologies for development (ITC4D) initiative can and should be more than developmentalism. How can we think more broadly about the pleasures of engaging with emerging media?
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Tags: digital media, fandom
Posted in Current Events, Global, Internet, Technology | Comments Off on Misreading pleasure: from pro-social soaps to ICT4D
In a quiet blog post with major ramifications, Google announces that it is no longer willing to censor search results in China. What happens next?
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Tags: China, Google, hackers, internet, policy
Posted in Current Events, Global, Internet | 2 Comments »