The money, according to the technology writer Kevin Kelly (2017), in a networked economy does not follow the path of digital products, ‘rather it follows the path of attention’. Increasingly we can see the disruption of television production and distribution not just as the result of a corporate strategy (Christensen et al. 2015) but as an outcome in relation to a changing model of audience engagement. The first half of this paper will look at the long tail strategy adopted by media networks such as HBO and Netflix to produce programmes, such as Breaking Bad and House of Cards, which gave filmmakers the creative freedom to build audiences over several seasons. These programmes are products of what many are calling television’s third golden ...
The traditional way of understanding television content consumption and viewer reactions may be simp...
“There is no such thing as a measure of quality, only a measure of how much attention something gets...
This chapter examines a politics of creative media work in order to make claims for what is good wor...
Feature films, television shows, homemade videos, tweets, blogs, and breaking news: digital media of...
In most societies in which supernatural elements are important in attaining success, some form of di...
Keeping an audience interested is a valuable skill, writes John Quiggin WHOSE attention is it anywa...
A heightened state of flux is now sweeping the media, creative, telecom and internet industries. In ...
This article engages the metaphor of showrunner as auteur to examine freedom of expression in televi...
This article explores binge-watching as part of neoliberal discourses surrounding control, class and...
Thinking is not a performing art, and that is why we need an Art for Thinking. Humans in a mediated ...
With the rise in the twenty-first century of streaming services such as Netflix, binge-watching has ...
Digital projects cost time and money. This reality may seem obvious, but is an often misunderstood f...
One challenge that Television Studies faces today is how to respond to the rise of an industry incre...
The Accidental Audience considers how media organizations construct and respond to audience members ...
In this provocation, I ask what is it to watch screendance, what is at stake, and what comes into pl...
The traditional way of understanding television content consumption and viewer reactions may be simp...
“There is no such thing as a measure of quality, only a measure of how much attention something gets...
This chapter examines a politics of creative media work in order to make claims for what is good wor...
Feature films, television shows, homemade videos, tweets, blogs, and breaking news: digital media of...
In most societies in which supernatural elements are important in attaining success, some form of di...
Keeping an audience interested is a valuable skill, writes John Quiggin WHOSE attention is it anywa...
A heightened state of flux is now sweeping the media, creative, telecom and internet industries. In ...
This article engages the metaphor of showrunner as auteur to examine freedom of expression in televi...
This article explores binge-watching as part of neoliberal discourses surrounding control, class and...
Thinking is not a performing art, and that is why we need an Art for Thinking. Humans in a mediated ...
With the rise in the twenty-first century of streaming services such as Netflix, binge-watching has ...
Digital projects cost time and money. This reality may seem obvious, but is an often misunderstood f...
One challenge that Television Studies faces today is how to respond to the rise of an industry incre...
The Accidental Audience considers how media organizations construct and respond to audience members ...
In this provocation, I ask what is it to watch screendance, what is at stake, and what comes into pl...
The traditional way of understanding television content consumption and viewer reactions may be simp...
“There is no such thing as a measure of quality, only a measure of how much attention something gets...
This chapter examines a politics of creative media work in order to make claims for what is good wor...