Media and CommunicationsWordPress

CST Online

CST Online
Television Studies Blog
Home PageAtom Feed
language
BlogsFunded ProjectsTeachingTechnologyHands On HistoryMedia and Communications
Published
Author John Ellis

The theory/practice ‘divide’ has long bedeviled media studies. But this divide cannot be sustained in the face of new concerns in the field. Studies of gaming and computing emphasize issues that studies of audiovisual media have been able to suppress: questions of the body, of the haptic, of physical engagement, of technologies and their complicated relationship with the humans who use them… or are used by them.

NewsPoliticsBernie SandersToby MillerUS ElectionsMedia and Communications
Published
Author Toby Miller

A decade ago, Bernie Sanders and I arrived on the same plane from New York to a public event in the mid-west. We were allocated shared transport from the airport, so I spent maybe forty minutes with him. The event we were headed to was about media reform. Other speakers included Jesse Jackson, Amy Goodman, Billy Bragg (whom noone had heard of), and Phil Donahue. My friend Bob McChesney was our presiding guru.

BlogsStreamingTechnologyWeb SeriesDigitalMedia and Communications
Published
Author Jennifer O’Meara

** ** For many, Lisa Kudrow will forever be associated with *Friends *(NBC, 1994-2004), the epitome of conservative network television. And yet, with both *The Comeback *(HBO, 2005; 2014) and *Web Therapy *(L Studio; Showtime: 2008—), the performer-writer-producer has shown great willingness to embrace developments in TV brought about by new media, as well as proving herself to be a subtle cultural satirist.

Conferences/eventsCrimeNewsTransnational TVEventMedia and Communications
Published
Author Sarah Niblock

My eyes lit up when I saw her – I’d dreamt of seeing her in the flesh since I first laid eyes on The Bridge ’s detective Saga Noren. Long, fashionably uncombed hair, ethereal beauty, flicking crumbs from her cinnamon bun off her ankle-grazing khaki military coat and leather trousers – this bewitching brunette was the ultimate Saganaut right down to her lace-up ankle boots.

BlogsCommercial TVCrimeDramaUK TVMedia and Communications
Published
Author Richard Hewett

Cast your minds back, if you will, to the year 2010, when the BBC was poised to launch a brand new detective on our screens. Dark and tousle-haired, his deductive powers would prove a constant source of amazement to his more grounded partner (and the viewing audience), while causing the local constabulary no small amount of irritation.

BlogsBox Sets / DVDCommercial TVDramaSound/musicMedia and Communications
Published
Author Liz Giuffre

At the moment I’m editing a book on Music in Comedy Television. As part of the project I decided to go back to iconic pieces of comedy television I remember having had a musical impact, starting with 80s sitcoms (judge me, go on). I was expecting that some of the bits would have aged badly – comedy often does, particularly as standards for social and political correctness develops.

BBCBlogsCostume/Historical DramaDramaCharles DickensMedia and Communications
Published
Author Christine Geraghty

Christmas is long gone and some of its televisual pleasures have been explored in the CST blogs by Kenneth Longden (https://cstonline.net/bbc-christmas and https://cstonline.net/sherlock-abominable) and Lorna Jowett (https://cstonline.net/not-so-cosy). But one Christmas special which began on Boxing Day on BBC1 still lingers on. Dickensian (Red Planet Pictures) made the usual Christmas use of a Charles Dickens’

BlogsCommercial TVECREANewsGreek TelevisionMedia and Communications
Published
Author Katerina Serafeim

It was in the November of 1989 when the first private television station in Greece transmitted its first signal and new frequencies invaded the audiovisual landscape which had been dominated by the state monopoly. This invasion was a turning point in the history of Greek television, as it was the stone that moved the stagnant waters of the strict and petrified television landscape, fostered by the state-bred system.

BBCBlogsLegislationNewsPublic Service BroadcastingMedia and Communications
Published
Author John Ellis

The BBC is under threat like never before. That seems to be the consensus about the two events of past weeks: a budget raid by the Chancellor that saddled the BBC with absorbing the £630 million cost of free TV licences for the over-75s, a seemingly hostile charter review process, kicked off with a Green Paper and the appointment of an advisory group by the new culture minister John Whittingdale.

BlogsComedyECREAQuality TVSitcomMedia and Communications
Published
Author Erica Horton

I passed my viva! Hurrah! Good, now that’s out of the way, let’s talk about Channel 4 Comedy commission Catastrophe , which is currently airing its second series, less than a year after its first went out in January of 2015. And let’s also get something else out of the way: the total agreement I am in with the majority of TV critics about its being utterly brilliant. Good. That’s done too.

BBCBlogsCommercial TVCostume/Historical DramaDramaMedia and Communications
Published
Author Tom Nicholls

Just before Christmas I was suffering from ‘Flue, we had just lost our third pet in a year and I was not at my best in a number of other ways. I arose from my sick bed mildly feverish by then and sought comfort in Television Drama. Not just any drama, but Doc. Martin (Buffalo Pictures for ITV, 2006-) for me the ultimate comfort television.