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April 2010, Week 2

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Film and TV Studies Discussion List <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Fri, 9 Apr 2010 10:59:12 -0500
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Greetings,

We want to let you know that the new issue of Flow: A Critical Forum on
Television and Media Culture is available at http://flowtv.org.

This issue features columns from Amanda Kelin, Zoe Druick, Julia
Lesage, James Bennett, Charles Acland, Hannah Hamad and Paul Achter.

This issue's columns in brief:

"The D2D Release: Notes on a Burgeoning Market" by Amanda Klein
(http://flowtv.org/?p=4902)
Direct-to-DVD (D2D) films are often ignored by academic discourse, yet
the study of D2D films offers an important contribution to the fields
of both reception and genre studies.

"While You Were Out: The Canadian Media Have Disappeared" by Zoe
Druick (http://flowtv.org/?p=4898)
The CRTC's decision to allow private television networks in Canada to
sell content to cable and satellite carriers may have broader policy
implications.

"Watching for Botox" by Julia Lesage (http://flowtv.org/?p=4890)
The visibility of botox on Damages leads the author to reflect on how
cosmetic surgery appears on television and in public life, and why.

"'Wanna Be On Top?': America's Next Top Model and Evaluating
Presentation Performance as Televisual Skill" by James Bennett
(http://flowtv.org/?p=4894)
A comparison of the performance styles of American and Australian 'Top
Model' hosts Tyra Banks and Johdi Meares.

"Marshall's Children" by Charles R. Acland (http://flowtv.org/?p=4881)
Re-situating Marshall McLuhan in media studies, in light of a new
biography by Douglas Coupland.

"Watching the Masters: Golf Becomes Exciting (In All the Wrong Ways)"
by Paul Achter (http://flowtv.org/?p=4885)
The anti-spectacle nature of the sport of golf is examined in light of
two events, the 2010 Masters and the re-emergence of Tiger Woods after
his much-publicized sex scandal.

"Postfeminist Primary Colors: Coding Femininities in Media Culture" by
Hannah Hamad (http://flowtv.org/?p=4912)
A discussion of the ways that femininities are conceptualized in
postfeminism through color-coding.


Interested in supporting Flow? Click HERE (http://flowtv.org/?page_id=2143).

FlowTV is now on Twitter! Follow Flow's Twitter page at:
http://twitter.com/flowtv
FlowTV is also on Facebook! Get updates on your news feed by becoming
a fan: www.facebook.com/FlowTV


We look forward to your visit and encourage your comments.

Best wishes,

Flow Editorial Staff

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