The Television Will be Revolutionized

Couverture
NYU Press, 2007 - 321 pages

Choice Outstanding Academic Title for 2008

Go behind the TV screen to explore what is changing, why it is changing, and why the changes matters.

After occupying a central space in American living rooms for the past fifty years, is television, as we’ve known it, dead? The capabilities and features of that simple box have been so radically redefined that it’s now nearly unrecognizable. Today, viewers with digital video recorders such as TiVo may elect to circumvent scheduling constraints and commercials. Owners of iPods and other portable viewing devices are able to download the latest episodes of their favorite shows and watch them whenever and wherever they want. Still others rent television shows on DVD, or download them through legal and illegal sources online. But these changes have not been hastening the demise of the medium. They are revolutionizing it.

The Television Will Be Revolutionized examines television at the turn of the twenty-first century—what Amanda D. Lotz terms the “post-network” era. Television, both as a technology and a tool for cultural storytelling, remains as important today as ever, but it has changed in fundamental ways as the result of technological innovations, proliferating cable channels targeting ever more specific niche audiences, and evolving forms of advertising such as product placement and branded entertainment. Many of the conventional practices and even the industry’s basic business model are proving unworkable in this new context, resulting in a crisis in norms and practices.

Through interviews with those working in the industry, attendance of various industry summits and meetings, surveys of trade publications, and consideration of an extensive array of popular television shows, Lotz takes us behind the screen to explore what is changing, why it’s changing, and why these changes matter.

 

Table des matières

Introduction
1
1 Understanding Television at the Beginning of the PostNetwork Era
27
The Technological Revolution of Television
49
Changes in the Practices of Creating Television
81
Breaking Open the Network Bottleneck
119
The New Economics of Television
152
Integrating New Measurement Techniques and Technologies
193
Five Cases
215
Still Watching Television
241
Notes
257
Selected Bibliography
295
Index
303
About the Author
321
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À propos de l'auteur (2007)

Amanda D. Lotz is Professor and Leader of the Transforming Media Industries Program in the Digital Media Research Centre at Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane. She is the author of The Television Will Be Revolutionized, Cable Guys: Television and Masculinities in the 21st Century, and Redesigning Women: Television After the Network Era, co-author of Understanding Media Industries and Television Studies, and editor of Beyond Prime Time: Television Programming in the Post-Network Era.

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