IT’S NOT TV: IT’S COMICS! by William Proctor
At times, the television landscape can be a source of irritation and chagrin for avid fans of...
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Oct 10, 2013 | Blogs, Uncategorized
At times, the television landscape can be a source of irritation and chagrin for avid fans of...
Read MoreOct 10, 2013 | Blogs, Uncategorized
It turns out that Washington isn’t the only place where ideas go to die . . . Watching the derivative and uninspiring fare served up last week by the networks to woo advertisers, I was flummoxed at the lack of creativity and...
Read MoreOct 4, 2013 | Blogs, Uncategorized
I have a confession to make. Recently, on a rare day with the house to myself and nothing to do, I watched Supernatural, Season One. The entire season. All twenty-two episodes in one day. This is not the first time I’ve...
Read MoreOct 4, 2013 | Blogs, Uncategorized
I read with interest Christine Geraghty’s blog ‘Reappraising the Television Heroine’ from 6 September. Geraghty notes the prevalence in recent TV drama of the female detective, and she discusses various contemporary television...
Read MoreOct 4, 2013 | Blogs, Uncategorized
On Monday 30 September at 9pm Sky Living launched The Face, a talent-training format based on modelling. One of the three mentors, Naomi Campbell was in New York on launch night. So what is a poor s’leb to do? She books her...
Read MoreSep 27, 2013 | Blogs, Uncategorized
As a plethora of PhD comics available for browsing will show, there are common themes that PhD candidates express about the thesis research and writing process. Largely, I am sure I don’t have to inform anyone, these focus on...
Read MoreSep 27, 2013 | Blogs, Uncategorized
When Miley Cyrus appeared on the Alan Carr ChattyMan show (13th September, 2013), the narrative and representational markers that define her as a particular star were in obvious play. Miley is immediately sexualised and...
Read MoreSep 27, 2013 | Blogs, Uncategorized
This week I watched the first episode of Bates Motel, the television spin-off from Alfred Hitchcock’s Psycho (1960) which began its UK broadcast on the 12th September. Of course the show is more accurately described as a...
Read MoreSep 20, 2013 | Blogs, Uncategorized
I was initially thinking of calling this post “Is the Age of Quality Television Over?” or even something more ominous like “Is This The End?” but I don’t think that it is, and I’m not ready to play TV-Nostradamus just yet, in...
Read MoreSep 20, 2013 | Blogs, Uncategorized
In my first blog after the summer hiatus I was going to write about some of the television I’d been enjoying over the first half of 2013 and in particular the glorious glut of zombies that seemed to be gracing my PVR for the...
Read MoreSep 20, 2013 | Blogs, Uncategorized
Greenpeace organized an Ice Ride on September 15 2013 to rally support for protecting de-territorialized sections of the Arctic from mineral exploitation. The Torygraph has surprisingly good video coverage of the UK-based...
Read MoreSep 13, 2013 | Blogs, Uncategorized
Aside of devising plotlines engaging enough to both maintain core audiences and entice new viewers, there can be few greater challenges to a television production team than the unexpected departure of regular cast members. The...
Read MoreLast week represented the culmination of over a year’s worth of organization. The ‘Doctor Who: Walking in Eternity conference’ ostensibly kicked off the academic round of 50 years of Doctor Whocelebrations which will culminate...
Read MoreSep 6, 2013 | Blogs, Uncategorized
Scott and Bailey, The Politician’s Husband, The Fall, Top of the Lake, The Americans Over the past few months I’ve found myself engaged with television heroines once again.1 The ‘Television for Women’ conference at...
Read MoreSep 6, 2013 | Blogs
JJ: So, our edited collection Television Aesthetics and Style is being launched at the ‘Doctor WhoWalking In Eternity’ conference at the University of Hertfordshire. This is an opportunity to reflect on what we think the book...
Read MoreAug 7, 2013 | Audience, Blogs, Conferences/events, Diary, Transnational TV
In Matt Hills’ 2002 book Fan Cultures, he theorises the relationship between fandom and academia, in particular the way academia and fandom are often imagined as being mutually exclusive with academia, the ‘good subject’,...
Read MoreJul 26, 2013 | Blogs, Uncategorized
D-Day: As it Happens (Channel 4) was part of the spate of programming that, as usual, accompanied the anniversary of the Allied landings in Normandy on 6th June, 1944. Described on its website as a ‘completely new way’ to tell...
Read MoreJul 26, 2013 | Blogs, Uncategorized
The US comedy Girls debuted on pay-cable channel HBO in April 2012 to viewing figures of less than...
Read MoreJul 19, 2013 | Blogs, Uncategorized
As I wind up and evaluate classes from the academic year just gone by, and start to prepare for the coming year, my thoughts turn to teaching, and in particular to teaching television. It’s always interesting in these blogs to...
Read MoreJul 19, 2013 | Blogs, Uncategorized
Who would be Chair of the BBC Trust in these scandal-hit days? Not Lord Patten, who has just announced he will be off after a single four-year term, despite the awkward timing (it will coincide with both a new government and a...
Read MoreJul 12, 2013 | Blogs, Uncategorized
Television is a media of texture. Glass, plasma, wood, chrome, shiny aluminium and bright neon, encase and embody the circuitry, while across its programming and commercials a range of textures are given weight, depth, and...
Read MoreJul 12, 2013 | Blogs, Uncategorized
Richard Matheson (1926-2013) Voted the best vampire novel of the 20th Century by the Horror Writers Association of America, Richard Matheson’s I Am Legend (1954) was revolutionary in its approach to the vampire genre and...
Read MoreJul 12, 2013 | Blogs, Uncategorized
You probably don’t hear it when it happens. Bobby ‘Bacala’ Baccalieri (Steve Schirripa) in ‘Soprano Home Movies’ (Episode 78 in Season 6) James Gandolfini’s death was a shocker. It came out of the blue. Late on a Wednesday...
Read MoreJul 12, 2013 | Blogs, Uncategorized
As part of my ongoing research into uses of ‘blue screen’ and the role of the television designer...
Read MoreJul 5, 2013 | Blogs, Uncategorized
We may watch children’s television at two key, if relatively long, periods in our lives. Firstly, when we arechildren, and second if and when we have children. I am currently experiencing the latter period, with my two year old...
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