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.
Read more »
Posts Tagged ‘ television genre ’
ABC
academia
advertising
Amazon
Apple
BBC
CBS
digital media
Disney
distribution
DVD
Facebook
Fall Premieres
fandom
FCC
feminism
film
gaming
gender
Google
HBO
Hollywood
independent film
industry
internet
Lost
Mad Men
media history
media studies
music
NBC
Netflix
piracy
politics
premieres
race/ethnicity
radio
reality television
social media
streaming
television
TV
Twitter
video games
YouTube
First Impressions: Fear the Walking Dead
Branding Hannibal: When Quality TV Viewers and Social Media Fans Converge
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.
Read more »
AnTENNA, UnREAL: Anti-Heroes, Genre and Legitimation
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.
Read more »
The Google+ Assignment—Evaluation
Using Google+ for student assignments in a TV genre class would, ideally, link learning with social technologies students are already using, and spur students to consume social media more critically. As with all experiments there was some success and some failure.
Read more »