Antenna's reviewers rate FOX's disinterment of Fred Savage, Minority Report, Jamie Lee Curtis, and John Stamos
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Tags: Fall Premieres, FOX, Grandfathered, Minority Report, pilots, premieres, Reviews, Rosewood, Scream Queens, The Grinder
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A roundtable discussion on The Carmichael Show by Phillip Cunningham, Alfred Martin, and Khadijah Costley White.
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Tags: blackness, Carmichael Show, class, NBC, race, sitcom, sitcoms, The Carmichael Show
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Mary Beth Haralovich reports on her experience at the Telluride Film Festival.
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Tags: Battle of the Century, Beasts of No Nation, Carol, cinema, Danny Boyle, Die Niebelungen, Eddie Cayhono, Eric Khoo, Fritz Lang, He Named Me Malala, Ixcanul, Jafar Panahi, Jayra Bustamente, Laurel and Hardy, L’inhumaine, Marcel L’Herbier, Paolo Cherchi Usai, Participant Media, Peter Sellars, Picture, Pierre Rissient, Rachel Kushner, Siti, Spotlight, Steve Jobs, Taxi, Telluride Film Festival, Todd Haynes
Posted in Film, Industry, Perspectives | Comments Off on Notes from the Telluride Film Festival
The Ashley Madison data breach and Rentboy's federally mandated closure underline Americans' ongoing problems with intimacy and digital technology and ultimately function as flare-ups in a perennial debate about whom and how people should desire and be.
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Tags: Ashley Madison, data breach, digital technology, hacks, intimacy, Obergefell v. Hodges, Rentboy, right to privacy
Posted in Perspectives, Technology, Technology | 1 Comment »
Amanda Keeler offers some initial thoughts on the pilot of Fear the Walking Dead and its use of storytelling, genre, setting, and character, pointing out that interpretation will depend largely on which elements of the original Walking Dead series resonate with individual viewers.
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Tags: AMC, Fear the Walking Dead, media franchise, television, television genre, television sound, The Walking Dead, True Detective, Zombies
Posted in Perspectives, TV | 2 Comments »
In the final installment of a limited series on NBC's gothic horror program Hannibal, Allison McCracken focuses on character Abigail Hobbs, who has become a prominent figure among the program's feminist fan communities.
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Tags: Abigail Hobbs, Bryan Fuller, Fannibals, female characters, female fandom, feminism, gothic horror, Hannibal, romanticism, Tumblr
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In positioning the series as fan fiction, Hannibal show runner Bryan Fuller and his team claim the identity and ethos of the feminine-gendered fan, a position that allows them to intertextually and ardently acknowledge both the practices and the affect of its primarily female fandom.
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Tags: Bryan Fuller, fan fiction, fandom, Fannibals, Hannibal, Hannibal Rising, Hannigram, murder husbands, Red Dragon, slash, Supernatural, Thomas Harris
Posted in Perspectives, TV | Comments Off on Love for the Fannish Archive: Fuller’s Hannibal as Fanfiction
In the first installment of a three-part series on NBC's Hannibal, Allison McCracken and Brian Faucette discuss the show's and network's branding efforts in relation to their appeals to "feminized" audiences.
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Tags: American Horror Story, branding, Bryan Fuller, Fannibals, Gaumont, gender, Hannibal, horror, Katie O'Connell, Legitimation, NBC, Pushing Daisies, quality television, television genre, The Walking Dead, Tumblr, Twitter
Posted in Perspectives, TV | 2 Comments »
The final part of a week-long forum for media scholars to share their thoughts about Lifetime's UnREAL explores the series in relation to cable branding and racial politics.
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Tags: 2 out of 3 renewal model, awards shows, blindcasting, cable branding, Devious Maids, girls, HBO, Lena Dunham, Lifetime, Mr. Robot, production culture, race, reality television, Spike, The Joe Schmo Show, UnREAL, USA
Posted in Perspectives, TV | Comments Off on AnTENNA, UnREAL: Channel Branding and Racial Politics
The second part of a week-long forum for media scholars to share their thoughts about Lifetime's UnREAL explores the series in relation to romance and pedagogy.
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Tags: #bb15, #bb17, Big Brother, Everlasting, Homeland, Lifetime, pedagogy, production culture, reality television, romance, The Hills, UnREAL
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The first part of a week-long forum for media scholars to share their thoughts about Lifetime's UnREAL explores the series in relation to contemporary anti-hero dramas.
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Tags: #quinning, anti-hero, Breaking Bad, Legitimation, Lifetime, production culture, Rachel Goldberg, reality television, television genre, UnREAL, Walter White
Posted in Perspectives, TV | 3 Comments »
Deborah Jaramillo engages with Emma Louise Briant's new book, Propaganda and Counter-terrorism: Strategies for Global Change, to explore how the prickly world of government propagandists lends critical context to television representations of espionage and the War on Terror.
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Tags: Emma Louise Briant, Homeland, ISIS, propaganda, Propaganda and Counter-terrorism: Strategies for Global Change, Scandal, terrorism, The Americans, U.S. intelligence, War on Terror
Posted in Perspectives, TV | Comments Off on TV and the Propaganda Crisis
The newly rebranded GeekyCon fan convention struggles to reconcile commerce and community, negotiate the inclusion of more white (cis) men in a heretofore female/queer environment, and create a "positive" fan environment that still leaves room for dissent.
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Tags: branding, fan conventions, feminism, GeekyCon, LeakyCon, youth
Posted in Film, Internet, Perspectives, TV | 4 Comments »
Peg Lynch, creator and star of Ethel and Albert, recently passed away at the age of 98. Her contributions to radio and early television may not be well known, but materially this forgotten show exists.
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Tags: archives, CBS, Earplay, Ethel and Albert, fandom, Gertrude Berg, Lantern, materiality, media history, NBC, NPR, obituary, Peg Lynch, radio, television, The Couple Next Door, The Kate Smith Hour, The Little Things in Life, WRGB
Posted in Perspectives | 6 Comments »
On behalf of the coordinating editors for Velvet Light Trap's 78th issue, Caroline Ferris Leader outlines the call for investigating children's media.
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Tags: David Buckingham, kids media, Payne Fund, Velvet Light Trap
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