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Published
Author Manuel José Damásio

The title of this blog might sound a little bit too catastrophist or even like pure fake news. It is not. It is an appeal to all those interested in ensuring that Europe is able to maintain in the coming decade a diversified and rich landscape of audiovisual content production and distribution. Beyond the body count and the rising notoriety of having been infected – have you heard that Madonna also had Covid?

Published
Author Andrew Pixley

When I attended my first academic television event back in Reading during 2013, it was called Spaces of Television – a wonderful all-encompassing title which allowed vivid and varied discussion about the space in which television was made and which it occupied in myriad meanings.

Published
Author CSTonline

Editors David L. Palatinus (University of Ruzomberok) Stefania Achella (University of Chieti-Pescara)   The purpose of this special issue of Itinerari would be to tackle the interrelation of Climate, Conflict and Migration, and the ways their pertaining ecological, political, and ethical complexities are construed and circulated via various cultural practices and ways of symbolization.

Published
Author Andrew Pixley

My wife and I are rather fond of the very charming children’s animation Clangers (1969-1974) [ii]. These kind, loveable, knitted, whistling, stop-motion aliens are just irresistible and one of those slices of childhood that can be revisited again and again. There’s a really nice episode where the Soup Dragon is upset.

Published
Author CSTonline

An edited collection on graphic medicine and graphic storytelling related to the COVID-19 global pandemic Editors: Alexandra P. Alberda, Anna Feigenbaum, William Proctor As the COVID-19 pandemic continues to infect millions, kill people around the world, dismantle political, economic and cultural infrastructures, and disrupt our everyday lives, we have seen a surge in amateur and professional creative activity in the comics medium.

Published
Author Andrew J. Salvati

Good true crime is like an onion: each layer, each episode, revealing more of the complexity of the case, more about the character and behavior of the suspects, more about possible motives and alibis, and more potentially compromising truths. In Netflix’s Tiger King (2020), each layer reveals more, well … crazy.

Published
Author Jonathan Bignell

The first screen portrayal of Ian Fleming’s James Bond was not Sean Connery in Dr No (1962), but on television nearly ten years before. Fleming had repeatedly sought to exploit the character on screen and there were numerous failed approaches made to him about adapting his Bond novels for television, from both US and British producers, during the 1950s.