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Television

Snurb — Wednesday 3 July 2024 10:07

Reactions to Gender Diversity in US Television Advertising

Politics | Polarisation | IAMCR 2024 | Television |

The next speaker in this IAMCR 2024 session is Kenton Wilkinson, whose interest is the presence of biracial couples and mixed-race families in US television advertising. Such diversity is becoming a new flashpoint in current culture wars in the country.

There is a long history of such culture wars in the US, but they have ramped up much further in recent years. In Texas, where Kenton is based, this has been especially pronounced, not least also in the aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic; the current Texas governor Greg Abbott has been at the forefront of implementing a number of especially …

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Snurb — Wednesday 26 June 2024 21:54

Analysing Hizbullah Propaganda Strategies on Telegram and TV

Politics | Government | ‘Fake News’ | Social Media | P³ ICA 2024 Postconference | Television |

And the afternoon session at the P³: Power, Propaganda, Polarisation ICA 2024 postconference starts with Tamer Farag, whose focus is on the communication strategies of Hizbullah in the polarised Lebanese media system (before the current escalation of violence in the region). Over the past decades, we’ve moved from optimism to pessimism about the role of social media in political communication, with plenty of evidence on the problematic uses of social media by autocratic regimes and anti-democratic groups.

But the understanding of social media communication also requires a perception of the local context: in a region beset with civil and other …

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Snurb — Wednesday 22 November 2023 09:04

The (Under)representation of Women Politicians in Italian Talkshows during COVID-19

Politics | Journalism | Industrial Journalism | ANZCA 2023 | Television |

The next speakers in this ANZCA 2023 session are Carlotta Antonelli and Mauro Bomba, whose interest is in the dynamics of the political discourse around the COVID-19 pandemic in the main talkshows on Italian TV, with particular focus on the positioning of women with political roles in such discourse. In such contexts, media serve in a function as representatives of public views and responses to the issues they themselves cover.

The present study took a mixed-methods approach, analysing the content of seven daytime talkshows from seven Italian TV stations. Women represented only about one quarter of the nearly 150 political …

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Snurb — Wednesday 25 October 2023 15:09

Challenges to Local TV in Indonesia from Digitisation

Internet Technologies | Streaming Media | COMNEWS 2023 | Television |

And the final speaker in this COMNEWS 2023 session is Setio Budi H. Hutomo, whose interest is in the digitisation of local television in Indonesia, and its impact on democratic processes. This system was affected by the 2002 broadcasting bill, which introduced private, community, and subscription broadcasting in addition to public service media. This has an impact especially also on local media, including local television.

There is a limited number of major media groups in Indonesia, which also dominate the TV advertising market. Local TV does not capture much of this spending, and the more than 300 local television stations …

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Snurb — Thursday 19 October 2023 09:59

Towards a Reparative Media System

Produsers and Produsage | Produsage Communities | Social Media | Streaming Media | AoIR 2023 | Television |

It’s that time of the year, and I’m in Philadelphia for the 2023 conference of the Association of Internet Researchers (continuing my 21-year streak of attending AoIR), which starts in earnest with the keynote by Aymar Jèan ‘AJ’ Escoffery. His focus is on reparative media, and he begins by noting that it feels like our collective harms are intensifying. This is exacerbated to some extent by corporate media, who often distribute the equivalent of fast, globally consumable food rather than slow and locally relevant content. This perpetuates injustices which require a particular approach to repair, including grassroots (re)distribution.

Power in …

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Snurb — Friday 15 September 2023 21:12

Reassessing the Landscape of Transnational News Broadcasting

Politics | Government | Journalism | Industrial Journalism | Future of Journalism 2023 | Television |

The final speaker in this Future of Journalism 2023 conference session is Jasmin Surm, whose interest is in recent changes to global television news. The transnational TV news landscape has changed profoundly in recent times – with more highly ideological content and more overt alignment with political agendas.

Networks have transcended traditional national boundaries and are now delivering content to global audiences; this gives audiences immediate access to global events worldwide. More recent networks such as RT or CGTN are engaged in an intense struggle for ideological supremacy, pursuing explicit public diplomacy objectives, while domestic networks like Fox News are …

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Snurb — Monday 3 August 2020 13:49

More ‘Fake News’ Research, and a PhD Opportunity!

Journalism | ‘Fake News’ | Social Media | Facebook | Evaluating the Challenge of ‘Fake News’ and Other Malinformation (ARC Discovery) | Television |

For those of you who have access to Australian television, this is an advance warning that the research on coronavirus-related mis- and disinformation that my colleagues and I at the QUT Digital Media Research Centre have conducted during the first half of this year will be featured prominently in tonight’s episode of the ABC’s investigative journalism programme Four Corners, which focusses on 5G conspiracy theories. A preview is below, and I hope that the full programme may also become available without geoblocking on ABC iView or the Four Corners Facebook page. The accompanying ABC News article has further …

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Snurb — Tuesday 9 July 2019 22:49

Tweeting Strategies by Spanish TV Football Shows

Journalism | Industrial Journalism | Social Media | Twitter | IAMCR 2019 | Television |

The next speaker in this IAMCR 2019 session is David Puertas Graell, who shifts our focus to the use of social media in Spanish sporting journalism. Such journalism is an important part of the contemporary media environment, and has a very large mainstream and social media audience, but remains substantially underresearched.

In Spain, there is a substantial media ecology for sports media, focussed especially on football; many such media outlets are now also present on Twitter. This makes it possible to study transmedia patterns between these mainstream and social media channels, and the present project has investigated a number …

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Snurb — Tuesday 9 July 2019 00:17

Binge-Watching as a Social Practice

Streaming Media | IAMCR 2019 | Television |

The final session at IAMCR 2019 for today starts with George Anghelcev, whose focus is on binge-watching. There has been a major shift over the last decade in how audiences view serialised video content, from being constrained to the regular timeslots for TV series to on-demand viewing of multiple episodes in single sittings. Some three quarters of U.S. TV consumers now binge-watch, and the numbers continue to rise – contrary to earlier news coverage, this is not a minority practice.

This is in part also because media narratives now portray binge-watching as a normal, ordinary, and widespread behaviour; however, differences …

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Snurb — Thursday 14 September 2017 21:22

'Post-Truth' in the 1994 South African Election

Politics | Elections | Journalism | Industrial Journalism | Future of Journalism 2017 | Television |

The final speaker in this Future of Journalism 2017 session is Bernadine Jones, who takes us back to the 1994 South African 'miracle election', with a particular focus on global north television reporting of the election.

The early 1990s saw a shift in international news reporting, from Cold War 'us vs. them' reporting to neo-liberal narratives promoting transnational economic cooperation and development. The 1994 South African election provided the perfect opportunity for this framing. This links with wider understandings of media logics (such as personalisation and shallow, dramatised reporting) and mediatisation (especially the televisualisation of politics at the expense of …

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