From Networks to Netflix (eBook, PDF)
A Guide to Changing Channels
Redaktion: Johnson, Derek
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From Networks to Netflix (eBook, PDF)
A Guide to Changing Channels
Redaktion: Johnson, Derek
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Now in a second edition, this textbook surveys the channels, platforms, and programming through which television distribution operates, with a diverse selection of contributors providing thorough exploration of global media industries in flux.
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Now in a second edition, this textbook surveys the channels, platforms, and programming through which television distribution operates, with a diverse selection of contributors providing thorough exploration of global media industries in flux.
Dieser Download kann aus rechtlichen Gründen nur mit Rechnungsadresse in A, B, BG, CY, CZ, D, DK, EW, E, FIN, F, GR, HR, H, IRL, I, LT, L, LR, M, NL, PL, P, R, S, SLO, SK ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 460
- Erscheinungstermin: 26. Juli 2022
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781000613605
- Artikelnr.: 64155846
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 460
- Erscheinungstermin: 26. Juli 2022
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781000613605
- Artikelnr.: 64155846
- Herstellerkennzeichnung Die Herstellerinformationen sind derzeit nicht verfügbar.
Derek Johnson is Professor of Media and Cultural Studies in the Department of Communication Arts at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. His books include Transgenerational Media Industries: Adults, Children, and the Reproduction of Culture as well as Media Franchising: Creative License and Collaboration in the Culture Industries. He is also the co-author of Television Goes to the Movies, and the co-editor of books including Point of Sale: Analyzing Media Retail.
Part 1: Introduction 1. Pluto TV: Channels, Portals, and the Changing
Television Cosmos Part 2: Broadcast Legacies 2. ABC: Crisis, Risk, and the
Logics of Change 3. The CW: Media Conglomerates in Partnership 4. PBS:
Crowdsourcing Culture Since 1969 5. Telemundo: Telenovelas for the
Twenty-First Century 6. TV Globo: Global Expansions and Cross-Media
Convergence from Broadcast to Streaming 7. MeTV: Old Time TV's Last Stand?
Part 3: Cable and Satellite Survivors 8. NewsNation: Local Broadcasting,
National Cable Channels, and the Evolution of WGN 9. Cartoon Network: Adult
Swim and the Evolving Use of "Edge" 10. Nick Jr.: Shifting Conglomerate
Strategies from Scheduling to Intellectual Property 11. Freeform: Shaking
Off the Family Brand within a Conglomerate Family 12. Comedy Central:
Trying to Grow Up by Getting Younger 13. Bravo: Branding, Fandom, and the
Lifestyle Network 14. AMC: Story Sync and Frictionless Fandom 15. Starz:
Distinction, Value, and Fandom in Premium TV 16. Playboy TV:
Contradictions, Confusion, and Post-Network Pornography 17. El Rey: Latino
Indie Auteur as Channel Identity Part 4: Streaming Ventures 18. Netflix:
Streaming Channel Brands as Global Meaning Systems 19. YouTube: The
Interface Between Television and Social Media Entertainment 20. iQIYI:
China's Internet Tigers Take Television 21. Amazon Prime Video: Scale,
Complexity, and Television as Widget 22. The Roku Channel: Vertically
Integrated Connected TV 23. OTV Open Television: The Development Process
24. Revry: Making the Case for LGBTQ Channels 25. iROKOtv: Drama for the
"Small-Small" Screen 26. Crunchyroll: Contested Authenticity in the
Creation of Niche Brand Communities 27. Viki: Governing Transnational
Fandom via Platforms 28. Twitch.tv: Tele-visualizing the Arcade Part 5:
Television Plus 29. Hulu: Negotiating National and International Streaming
30. Hotstar: Reimagining Television Audiences in Digital India 31. Abema
TV: Where Broadcasting and Streaming Collide 32. Mango TV: The Rise of a
State-Controlled Entertainer 33. Disney+: Imagining Industrial
Intertextuality 34. ESPN+: Subscribing to Diversity, Marginalizing Women's
Sports 35. Peacock: Network Heritage, Olympic Dreams, and the
Transformation of NBC Sports 36. HBO Max: Media Conglomerates and the
Organizational Logic of Streaming 37. Paramount+: "Peaking" Subscriber
Interest in Legacy Television Franchises
Television Cosmos Part 2: Broadcast Legacies 2. ABC: Crisis, Risk, and the
Logics of Change 3. The CW: Media Conglomerates in Partnership 4. PBS:
Crowdsourcing Culture Since 1969 5. Telemundo: Telenovelas for the
Twenty-First Century 6. TV Globo: Global Expansions and Cross-Media
Convergence from Broadcast to Streaming 7. MeTV: Old Time TV's Last Stand?
Part 3: Cable and Satellite Survivors 8. NewsNation: Local Broadcasting,
National Cable Channels, and the Evolution of WGN 9. Cartoon Network: Adult
Swim and the Evolving Use of "Edge" 10. Nick Jr.: Shifting Conglomerate
Strategies from Scheduling to Intellectual Property 11. Freeform: Shaking
Off the Family Brand within a Conglomerate Family 12. Comedy Central:
Trying to Grow Up by Getting Younger 13. Bravo: Branding, Fandom, and the
Lifestyle Network 14. AMC: Story Sync and Frictionless Fandom 15. Starz:
Distinction, Value, and Fandom in Premium TV 16. Playboy TV:
Contradictions, Confusion, and Post-Network Pornography 17. El Rey: Latino
Indie Auteur as Channel Identity Part 4: Streaming Ventures 18. Netflix:
Streaming Channel Brands as Global Meaning Systems 19. YouTube: The
Interface Between Television and Social Media Entertainment 20. iQIYI:
China's Internet Tigers Take Television 21. Amazon Prime Video: Scale,
Complexity, and Television as Widget 22. The Roku Channel: Vertically
Integrated Connected TV 23. OTV Open Television: The Development Process
24. Revry: Making the Case for LGBTQ Channels 25. iROKOtv: Drama for the
"Small-Small" Screen 26. Crunchyroll: Contested Authenticity in the
Creation of Niche Brand Communities 27. Viki: Governing Transnational
Fandom via Platforms 28. Twitch.tv: Tele-visualizing the Arcade Part 5:
Television Plus 29. Hulu: Negotiating National and International Streaming
30. Hotstar: Reimagining Television Audiences in Digital India 31. Abema
TV: Where Broadcasting and Streaming Collide 32. Mango TV: The Rise of a
State-Controlled Entertainer 33. Disney+: Imagining Industrial
Intertextuality 34. ESPN+: Subscribing to Diversity, Marginalizing Women's
Sports 35. Peacock: Network Heritage, Olympic Dreams, and the
Transformation of NBC Sports 36. HBO Max: Media Conglomerates and the
Organizational Logic of Streaming 37. Paramount+: "Peaking" Subscriber
Interest in Legacy Television Franchises
Part 1: Introduction 1. Pluto TV: Channels, Portals, and the Changing
Television Cosmos Part 2: Broadcast Legacies 2. ABC: Crisis, Risk, and the
Logics of Change 3. The CW: Media Conglomerates in Partnership 4. PBS:
Crowdsourcing Culture Since 1969 5. Telemundo: Telenovelas for the
Twenty-First Century 6. TV Globo: Global Expansions and Cross-Media
Convergence from Broadcast to Streaming 7. MeTV: Old Time TV's Last Stand?
Part 3: Cable and Satellite Survivors 8. NewsNation: Local Broadcasting,
National Cable Channels, and the Evolution of WGN 9. Cartoon Network: Adult
Swim and the Evolving Use of "Edge" 10. Nick Jr.: Shifting Conglomerate
Strategies from Scheduling to Intellectual Property 11. Freeform: Shaking
Off the Family Brand within a Conglomerate Family 12. Comedy Central:
Trying to Grow Up by Getting Younger 13. Bravo: Branding, Fandom, and the
Lifestyle Network 14. AMC: Story Sync and Frictionless Fandom 15. Starz:
Distinction, Value, and Fandom in Premium TV 16. Playboy TV:
Contradictions, Confusion, and Post-Network Pornography 17. El Rey: Latino
Indie Auteur as Channel Identity Part 4: Streaming Ventures 18. Netflix:
Streaming Channel Brands as Global Meaning Systems 19. YouTube: The
Interface Between Television and Social Media Entertainment 20. iQIYI:
China's Internet Tigers Take Television 21. Amazon Prime Video: Scale,
Complexity, and Television as Widget 22. The Roku Channel: Vertically
Integrated Connected TV 23. OTV Open Television: The Development Process
24. Revry: Making the Case for LGBTQ Channels 25. iROKOtv: Drama for the
"Small-Small" Screen 26. Crunchyroll: Contested Authenticity in the
Creation of Niche Brand Communities 27. Viki: Governing Transnational
Fandom via Platforms 28. Twitch.tv: Tele-visualizing the Arcade Part 5:
Television Plus 29. Hulu: Negotiating National and International Streaming
30. Hotstar: Reimagining Television Audiences in Digital India 31. Abema
TV: Where Broadcasting and Streaming Collide 32. Mango TV: The Rise of a
State-Controlled Entertainer 33. Disney+: Imagining Industrial
Intertextuality 34. ESPN+: Subscribing to Diversity, Marginalizing Women's
Sports 35. Peacock: Network Heritage, Olympic Dreams, and the
Transformation of NBC Sports 36. HBO Max: Media Conglomerates and the
Organizational Logic of Streaming 37. Paramount+: "Peaking" Subscriber
Interest in Legacy Television Franchises
Television Cosmos Part 2: Broadcast Legacies 2. ABC: Crisis, Risk, and the
Logics of Change 3. The CW: Media Conglomerates in Partnership 4. PBS:
Crowdsourcing Culture Since 1969 5. Telemundo: Telenovelas for the
Twenty-First Century 6. TV Globo: Global Expansions and Cross-Media
Convergence from Broadcast to Streaming 7. MeTV: Old Time TV's Last Stand?
Part 3: Cable and Satellite Survivors 8. NewsNation: Local Broadcasting,
National Cable Channels, and the Evolution of WGN 9. Cartoon Network: Adult
Swim and the Evolving Use of "Edge" 10. Nick Jr.: Shifting Conglomerate
Strategies from Scheduling to Intellectual Property 11. Freeform: Shaking
Off the Family Brand within a Conglomerate Family 12. Comedy Central:
Trying to Grow Up by Getting Younger 13. Bravo: Branding, Fandom, and the
Lifestyle Network 14. AMC: Story Sync and Frictionless Fandom 15. Starz:
Distinction, Value, and Fandom in Premium TV 16. Playboy TV:
Contradictions, Confusion, and Post-Network Pornography 17. El Rey: Latino
Indie Auteur as Channel Identity Part 4: Streaming Ventures 18. Netflix:
Streaming Channel Brands as Global Meaning Systems 19. YouTube: The
Interface Between Television and Social Media Entertainment 20. iQIYI:
China's Internet Tigers Take Television 21. Amazon Prime Video: Scale,
Complexity, and Television as Widget 22. The Roku Channel: Vertically
Integrated Connected TV 23. OTV Open Television: The Development Process
24. Revry: Making the Case for LGBTQ Channels 25. iROKOtv: Drama for the
"Small-Small" Screen 26. Crunchyroll: Contested Authenticity in the
Creation of Niche Brand Communities 27. Viki: Governing Transnational
Fandom via Platforms 28. Twitch.tv: Tele-visualizing the Arcade Part 5:
Television Plus 29. Hulu: Negotiating National and International Streaming
30. Hotstar: Reimagining Television Audiences in Digital India 31. Abema
TV: Where Broadcasting and Streaming Collide 32. Mango TV: The Rise of a
State-Controlled Entertainer 33. Disney+: Imagining Industrial
Intertextuality 34. ESPN+: Subscribing to Diversity, Marginalizing Women's
Sports 35. Peacock: Network Heritage, Olympic Dreams, and the
Transformation of NBC Sports 36. HBO Max: Media Conglomerates and the
Organizational Logic of Streaming 37. Paramount+: "Peaking" Subscriber
Interest in Legacy Television Franchises