At first a cultural oddity, reality television is now a cultural commonplace. These quasi-documentaries proliferate on a wide range of network and cable channels, proving adaptable to any audience demographic. Across a variety of types of reality offerings, narratives of adjudication replete with judges, juries, and verdicts -abound. Do these judgment formations simply reflect the often competitive structure or subtext of reality TV? Or is there a deeper, more constitutive connection between reality TV as a genre and narratives of law and adjudication? This article looks beyond the many judge shows popular on reality TV (e.g., Judge Judy\u27) to examine the law-like operations of the genre itself, and how legal narratives dovetail ...
Published in cooperation with the American Bar Association Section of Dispute Resolutio
Ask the average person to imagine what a judge does, and the answer will most likely be something ri...
This article aims to explore the domain of television culture by using the American television court...
This thesis presents an in-depth, exploratory qualitative content analysis of American reality-based...
This dissertation examines the performances of reality television courtroom judges through the frame...
This paper attempts to counter legal studies' common reading of court TV shows by starting with an u...
Critics of reality daytime television court shows remain divided over whether the possible education...
This article explores the specific capacity of TV courtroom drama to dramatize civic issues and to s...
This Article argues that to understand the nomos we must study law and litigation as represented in ...
In the Journal’s January-February issue, Part I of this article began by surveying television’s prof...
Reality television is a complex phenomenon which spans a long history. Shows featuring participants ...
Despite the dominance of legal themes in popular culture, judges do not always make an appearance, a...
For over sixty years American television series dealing with law and justice have helped the public ...
[W] e are seeing a shift from ... the failed representation of the real ... to ... the impenetrable ...
Since the mid to late nineteen eighties, the television world has been showing an increasing number ...
Published in cooperation with the American Bar Association Section of Dispute Resolutio
Ask the average person to imagine what a judge does, and the answer will most likely be something ri...
This article aims to explore the domain of television culture by using the American television court...
This thesis presents an in-depth, exploratory qualitative content analysis of American reality-based...
This dissertation examines the performances of reality television courtroom judges through the frame...
This paper attempts to counter legal studies' common reading of court TV shows by starting with an u...
Critics of reality daytime television court shows remain divided over whether the possible education...
This article explores the specific capacity of TV courtroom drama to dramatize civic issues and to s...
This Article argues that to understand the nomos we must study law and litigation as represented in ...
In the Journal’s January-February issue, Part I of this article began by surveying television’s prof...
Reality television is a complex phenomenon which spans a long history. Shows featuring participants ...
Despite the dominance of legal themes in popular culture, judges do not always make an appearance, a...
For over sixty years American television series dealing with law and justice have helped the public ...
[W] e are seeing a shift from ... the failed representation of the real ... to ... the impenetrable ...
Since the mid to late nineteen eighties, the television world has been showing an increasing number ...
Published in cooperation with the American Bar Association Section of Dispute Resolutio
Ask the average person to imagine what a judge does, and the answer will most likely be something ri...
This article aims to explore the domain of television culture by using the American television court...