Author version made available in accordance with the publisher's policy.Inspired by a review of the political theories of Anthony Giddens, particularly his question of whether or not there can be a Third Way politics of family, this essay examines the TV show Supernanny as an example of what we call “Third Way TV.” Tracing the program’s roots to a collection of British programs offering advice to parents in the late 1990s and early 2000s, as well as to the longer-standing British tradition of public service broadcasting that sought to “better its audience,” we argue that the program departs from that legacy in its commercialization. Supernanny is a hybrid form of pedagogical television: Third Way TV—a commercialization of the public service...
The provision of children's content should be a key constituent of the public service brand, but has...
The advent of digital transmission, pay-TV and the internet fragmented the child audience across sev...
This paper examines the rehearsal of familiar debates about how to raise children within the genre o...
In 2004 the problem of bad parenting came to the British public’s attention in a string of reality T...
Australian children have always been considered a special television audience. In November 2009, Aus...
Abstract / This article examines children’s television in the context of the debate on media global-...
This paper analyses the campaign to establish terrestrial digital children’s public serv...
This article examines children\u27s television in the context of the debate on media globalization b...
Layering and drift have occurred in Australian cultural policy surrounding the production of film an...
Contemporary children enjoy abundant supplies of television made especially for them, delivered acro...
This paper traces the development of children’s multiplatform commissioning at the Australian ...
This paper intervenes in debates about the construction of ‘publics’ by the media. It traces the way...
This article considers the distinctive ways in which the Special Broadcasting Service (SBS) has evol...
This paper considers how the dichotomous construction of childhood which has traditionally underpinn...
This paper examines children’s multiplatform commissioning at the Australian Broadcasting Corp...
The provision of children's content should be a key constituent of the public service brand, but has...
The advent of digital transmission, pay-TV and the internet fragmented the child audience across sev...
This paper examines the rehearsal of familiar debates about how to raise children within the genre o...
In 2004 the problem of bad parenting came to the British public’s attention in a string of reality T...
Australian children have always been considered a special television audience. In November 2009, Aus...
Abstract / This article examines children’s television in the context of the debate on media global-...
This paper analyses the campaign to establish terrestrial digital children’s public serv...
This article examines children\u27s television in the context of the debate on media globalization b...
Layering and drift have occurred in Australian cultural policy surrounding the production of film an...
Contemporary children enjoy abundant supplies of television made especially for them, delivered acro...
This paper traces the development of children’s multiplatform commissioning at the Australian ...
This paper intervenes in debates about the construction of ‘publics’ by the media. It traces the way...
This article considers the distinctive ways in which the Special Broadcasting Service (SBS) has evol...
This paper considers how the dichotomous construction of childhood which has traditionally underpinn...
This paper examines children’s multiplatform commissioning at the Australian Broadcasting Corp...
The provision of children's content should be a key constituent of the public service brand, but has...
The advent of digital transmission, pay-TV and the internet fragmented the child audience across sev...
This paper examines the rehearsal of familiar debates about how to raise children within the genre o...