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Published
Author David Levente Palatinus

(TV that just didn’t get it right…) Medical television is subversive. Because it touches upon questions that are themselves subversive, divisive, invasive (like many of the diagnostic, therapeutic, or preventive practices of medicine), it touches upon questions that, like television itself, are both perennial and ephemeral, and haunt cultural practice, economy, and policy-making.

Published
Author Stefania Marghitu

*This interview was edited for clarity.  It was conducted via phone with e-mail followups. Did you always know you wanted the content that the Gogglebox cast watched to be varied, that mixture of everything from nature shows to the news to party political broadcasts? Yeah, I try each week to include a good mix of drama, documentary, entertainment and news.

Published
Author Pat Holland

No, I’m not planning to write about Goggle Box -although I’m constantly struck by the contrast between the high-pitched engagement of the sofa-sitters (after all it did win the 2014  BAFTA award for ‘constructed factual’ programmes) and the research conducted by Peter Collet for the IBA back in the 1980s.

Published
Author Michael Lovelock

Gay-themed drama on British television has become largely synonymous with the name of Russell T Davies. As the creator of the iconic and controversial Queer as Folk , first broadcast on Channel 4 in 1999, it was perhaps inevitable that Davies’ most recent offering, the eight-part drama series Cucumber , also broadcast on Channel 4, would be subject to no shortage of critical attention.

Published
Author Lisa W. Kelly

In 2006, Richard Sennett published a short article in The Political Quarterly entitled ‘What do we mean by talent?’ Having carried out ethnographic research with workers in the so-called ‘New Economy’, or rather those in the financial sector, new technology and what he terms ‘media services’ (163), Sennett sought to examine the notion of talent in relation to meritocracy.

Published
Author Lorna Jowett

I’ve always enjoyed action-adventure, especially swashbuckling action-adventure. Admittedly, though, when the BBC’s new drama The Musketeers (2014-) began last year I didn’t have high expectations. The BBC’s attempts at entertaining action series have been a little hit and miss, as the cancellation of Atlantis earlier this year and the rather short-lived Robin Hood (2006-2009) some years before.