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Television on Demand: Curatorial Culture and the Transformation of TV

Autor Dr. MJ Robinson
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 31 mai 2017
Since 2010 "curation" has become a marketing buzzword. Wrenched from its traditional home in the world of high art, everything from food to bed linens to dog toys now finds itself subject to this formerly rarified activity. Most of the time the term curation is being inaccurately used to refer to the democratization of choice - an inevitable development and side effect of the economics of long tail distribution. However, as any true curator will tell you - curation is so much more than choosing - it relies upon human intelligence, agency, evaluation and carefully considered criteria - an accurate, if utopian definition of the much-abused and overused term. Television on Demand examines what happens when curation becomes the primary way in which media users or viewers engage with mass media such as journalism, music, cinema, and, most specifically, television. Mass media's economic model is based on mass audiences - not a cornucopia of endless options from which individuals can customize their intake. The rise of a curatorial culture where viewers create their own entertainment packages and select from a buffet of viewing options and venues has caused a seismic shift for the post-network television industry - one whose ultimate effects and outcomes remain unknown. Curatorial culture is a revolutionary new consumption ecology - one that the post-network television producers and distributors have not yet figured out how to monetize, as they remain in what anthropologists call a "liminal" state of a rite of passage - no longer what they used to be, but not yet what they will become. How does an advertiser-supported medium find leave alone quantify viewers who DVR This is Us but fast-forward through the commercials; have a season pass to The Walking Dead via iTunes to watch on their daily commutes; are a season behind on Grey's Anatomy via Amazon Prime but record the current season to watch after they're caught up; binge watched Orange is the New Black the day it dropped on Netflix; are watching new-to-them episodes of Downton Abbey on pbs.org; never miss PewDiePie's latest video on YouTube, graze on Law & Order: SVU on Hulu and/or TNT and religiously watch Jimmy Fallon on The Tonight Show via digital rabbit ears? While audiences clamor for more story-driven and scripted entertainment, their transformed viewing habits undermine the dominant economic structures that fund quality episodic series. Legacy broadcasters are producing more scripted content than ever before and experimenting with new models of distribution - CBS will premiere its new Star Trek series on broadcast television but require fans to subscribe to its AllAccess app to continue their viewing. NBC's original Will & Grace is experiencing a syndication renaissance as a limited-run season of new episodes are scheduled for fall 2017. At the same time, new producing entities such as Amazon Studios, Netflix and soon Apple TV compete with high-budget "television" programs that stream around traditional distribution models, industrial structures and international licensing agreements. Television on Demand: Curatorial Culture and the Transformation of TV explains and theorizes curatorial culture; examines the response of the "industry," its regulators, its traditional audience quantifiers, and new digital entrants to the ecosystem of the empowered viewer; and considers the viable future(s) of this crucial culture industry.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781441148094
ISBN-10: 1441148094
Pagini: 264
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 22 mm
Greutate: 0.41 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:New York, United States

Caracteristici

Explains the relationships between producers, programmers, advertisers, and regulators which drive the industry development

Notă biografică

MJ Robinson is an assistant professor of journalism and new media and Graduate Deputy Chair of the M.S. in Media Studies in the Department of TV and Radio at Brooklyn College, City University of New York (CUNY), USA. Robinson teaches undergraduate courses in multi-platform journalism and graduate courses in media studies. Her research focuses on the challenges facing the contemporary television industry/ies, the political economy of the media industries and the history of municipal broadcasting in the United States, most specifically New York City. She has worked in international television and film co-production and financing, documentary film, and as a motion picture archivist.

Cuprins

Acknowledgments1. Rites and Rituals of Transformation and the Television Industry/ies2. From Surf to Search to Seek.. Curatorial Culture and the Transformation of Viewer Agency3. Who's Watching? When? Why? Where? The Limits and Liminality of Audience Quantification4. The Industry: Ritual, Tricksters, Response and Reification5. Containment, Common Carriage and Net Neutrality - Regulating the Long Tail of OTT Television6. Curatorial Culture goes International 7. The Curatorial FutureGlossary

Recenzii

A worthwhile and informative read that has the potential to find an audience amongst scholars, industry professionals and the general public.
One might think that television today defies explanation. Television on Demand demystifies the medium in a lucid and engaging way, emphasizing the curatorial culture in which those in front of and behind the screens, as well as ancillary industries and regulators find themselves participating in a milieu that is both evolutionary and revolutionary at the same time. A healthy dose of wry humor is thrown in for good measure, and the glossary of terms is an added bonus for the seasoned scholar as well as the neophyte.
With Television on Demand, MJ Robinson provides us with a fundamental rendering of the contemporary landscape for these things we call "television." Through examining the myriad changes in the culture of the audience, the business, and regulatory bodies, here in the U.S. and around the world, this book explores what has changed, why it's changed, and points toward the many ways that these cultures have driven where technological development has gone. In particular, her focus on this as a liminal moment of transformation and understanding the contemporary/emerging television viewing experience as part of a curatorial culture provides a crucial framing for us to make sense of all these changes. For those who work in all the many sectors that we may describe as "the television industry," for scholars who study this space, and for students and television viewers who are interested in understanding this period of a medium in transition, M.J. Robinson has provided us with a comprehensive and accessible overview of this moment.
Television is changing before our very eyes and TV on Demand sets out to narrate those changes in ways that serve students of media and communication, TV scholars, as well as industry insiders and entrepreneurs striving to make sense of the flux. On one hand the taken-for-granted structures governing our consuming and viewing habits have shifted so much so that "watching TV" can be, at best, a baffling search for access to content. On the other, the rapid transformation of viewing habits has markets scrambling to monetize new televisual practices, and ratings experts scratching their heads. Robinson's book steps into this churn with a whip-smart capacity to describe the new terms of engagement in television's "liminal phase." As push media become pull media, as active viewers engage in curatorial practices, Robinson encourages us to see TV as a multifaceted set of principles, policies, and practices-all of which are in motion. If writing intellectual history is like "nailing jelly to a wall," then writing institutional histories of fast-changing media environments is like trying to do so with a nail gun. It's surprisingly dramatic, exciting, and potentially messy. Robinson's impressive TV on Demand captures the drama of the medium's recent shifts and institutional entanglements-- but manages the seemingly impossible task of breaking down the story and its implications with great skill and clarity. Savoring the "liminality" of the moment, Robinson has written a readable history of an institution in flux, approaching television's transformation from the viewer as well as the producer's perspectives. Instead of waiting for what seems like a historical moment of crisis to pass, waiting for the dust to settle, and then describing what happened, Robinson leaps into the fray with the clear-eyed methodology of a historian and the analytical perspective of a media ecologist.