- "1979 is 2011: Post-Punk on the Road Again" by Norma Coates: Coates waxes nostalgic as the punk bands who are returning to the touring circuit and exploiting the digital environment.
- "Problems in 'Wellywood': Rethinking the politics of transnational cultural labor" by Bridget Conor: Conor examines the politics of transnational cultural labor in last fall's Hobbit dispute.
- "Let's All Read this Text" by Ann Johnson: An exploration of audience response to satire and the "ridiculous" through a video about a banana.
- "Bromance and the Boys of Boston Legal" by Kelli Marshall: Marshall explores the homosocial "bromance" of Alan Shore and Denny Crane in "Boston Legal" leading up to the series' climax
- "Haunting Crime: the Gothic, the Grotesque and the Paranormal" by Yvonne Tasker: Tasker examines the linkage between the stylized traditions of the Gothic and the crime genre.
- "Disaster Zones and the Performance of Television" by Graeme Turner: The disastrous flooding in Queensland, AU, calls into question the way in which television engages with local communities during moments of crisis.
Keeping TV Studies students informed of news, views, and reviews about television
Saturday, January 29, 2011
New Flow Issue
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