Greetings, We just wanted to let you know that the new issue of Flow: A Critical Forum on Television and Media Culture is out. This issue features columns by Craig Jacobsen, Alan McKee, Ray Cha, Gareth Palmer, Chandler Harriss, and Daniel Marcus. Please visit the journal at http://www.flowtv.org to read these columns and contribute responses to them. This issue's columns in brief: "The Simultaneous Dawning and Twilight of Broadcast Network Narrative" by Craig Jacobsen: It isn't hard to imagine a future in which broadcasting serves the role of advertising and secondary revenue stream for the primary medium: complete seasons of episodes packed for sale on DVD or for download. "Below Average" by Alan McKee: Why it's best to stick to shows with singing, dancing, or, preferably, both. "Television Sets Grow Up" by Ray Cha: Part two of three in a series describes a control or possibly "on demand" nature more important than a effeciently planned experience and delivery of "television". "On Our Best Behavior" by Gareth Palmer: Television's engagement with surveillance of all kinds is fashioning a productive shame, reproducing models of ever more restricted "outer-focused" identities. Feature: "Is There a Detective in the 'House'?" by Chandler Harriss: Harriss examines the use and usefulness of genre in television studies. "Borat In (Next To!) The Balkans" by Daniel Marcus: For those in the former Yugoslavia, "Borat" offers a rich field of representations to express and explore their self-definitions as emerging participants in Western culture and social practices. We look forward to your visit and encourage your comments. Best wishes, Flow Editorial Staff ---- Screen-L is sponsored by the Telecommunication & Film Dept., the University of Alabama: http://www.tcf.ua.edu