000 | 04052cam a2200241 i 4500 | ||
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005 | 20230814153305.0 | ||
008 | 220217t20232023nyua ob 001 0 eng | ||
010 | _a 2022006579 | ||
020 |
_a9780367568245 _c4966.90 |
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040 | _aS.X.U.K | ||
041 | _aEnglish | ||
082 | 0 | 0 | _aR 302.2345 FRO |
245 | 0 | 0 |
_aFrom networks to Netflix : _ba guide to changing channels / _cedited by Derek Johnson. |
250 | _a2nd ed. | ||
260 |
_aNew York _bRoutledge _cc2023 |
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300 |
_a450p. _bP.B. |
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500 | _aTable of Contents Introduction 1. Pluto TV: Channels, Portals, and the Changing Television Cosmos Derek Johnson Broadcast Legacies 2. ABC: Crisis, Risk, and the Logics of Change Kristen J. Warner 3. The CW: Media Conglomerates in Partnership Caryn Murphy 4. PBS: Crowdsourcing Culture Since 1969 Michele Hilmes 5. Telemundo: Telenovelas for the Twenty-First Century Juan Llamas-Rodriguez 6. TV Globo: Global Expansions and Cross-Media Convergence from Broadcast to Streaming Courtney Brannon Donoghue 7. MeTV: Old Time TV’s Last Stand? Derek Kompare Cable and Satellite Survivors 8. NewsNation: Local Broadcasting, National Cable Channels, and the Evolution of WGN Christine Becker 9. Cartoon Network: Adult Swim and the Evolving Use of "Edge" Jacob Mertens and Lauren E. Wilks 10. Nick Jr.: Shifting Conglomerate Strategies from Scheduling to Intellectual Property Erin Copple Smith 11. Freeform: Shaking Off the Family Brand within a Conglomerate Family Barbara Selznick 12. Comedy Central: Trying to Grow Up by Getting Younger Nick Marx 13. Bravo: Branding, Fandom, and the Lifestyle Network Martina Baldwin and Suzanne Leonard 14. AMC: Story Sync and Frictionless Fandom Suzanne Scott 15. Starz: Distinction, Value, and Fandom in Premium TV Myles McNutt 16. Playboy TV: Contradictions, Confusion, and Post-Network Pornography Peter Alilunas 17. El Rey: Latino Indie Auteur as Channel Identity Alisa Perren Streaming Ventures 18. Netflix: Streaming Channel Brands as Global Meaning Systems Timothy Havens and Ryan Stoldt 19. YouTube: The Interface Between Television and Social Media Entertainment Stuart Cunningham, Smith Mehta, Gabriela Lunardi, and Guy Healy 20. iQIYI: China’s Internet Tigers Take Television Michael Curtin and Yongli Li 21. Amazon Prime Video: Scale, Complexity, and Television as Widget Karen Petruska 22. The Roku Channel: Vertically Integrated Connected TV Ramon Lobato and Eleanor Patterson 23. OTV | Open Television: The Development Process Aymar Jean Christian 24. Revry: Making the Case for LGBTQ Channels Julia Himberg 25. iROKOtv: Drama for the "Small-Small" Screen Tori Omega Arthur 26. Crunchyroll: Contested Authenticity in the Creation of Niche Brand Communities Susan Noh 27. Viki: Governing Transnational Fandom via Platforms Wan-Jun Lu 28. Twitch.tv: Tele-visualizing the Arcade Matthew Thomas Payne Television Plus 29. Hulu: Negotiating National and International Streaming Evan Elkins 30. Hotstar: Reimagining Television Audiences in Digital India Shanti Kumar and Aswin Punathambekar 31. Abema TV: Where Broadcasting and Streaming Collide Marc Steinberg 32. Mango TV: The Rise of a State-Controlled Entertainer Xiaoying Han 33. Disney+: Imagining Industrial Intertextuality Kyra Hunting and Jonathan Gray 34. ESPN+: Subscribing to Diversity, Marginalizing Women’s Sports Jason Kido Lopez 35. Peacock: Network Heritage, Olympic Dreams, and the Transformation of NBC Sports Deborah L. Jaramillo 36. HBO Max: Media Conglomerates and the Organizational Logic of Streaming Gregory Steirer 37. Paramount+: "Peaking" Subscriber Interest in Legacy Television Franchises Derek Johnson | ||
650 | 0 | _aTelevision viewers | |
650 | 0 | _aTelevision broadcasting | |
650 | 0 | _aStreaming technology (Telecommunications) | |
700 | 1 |
_aJohnson, Derek, _4ed. |
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942 | _cREF MASS | ||
999 |
_c10106 _d10106 |