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: Lisa Patti, Abigail Lambke, Shannon Mattern, Pauline Stakelon, Shayne Pepper, Alexandra Juhasz, Kimberly Springer, Mel Hogan and Pamela Ingelton. This issue's columns in brief: "Huckster, Huckster: The Archival Brando" by Lisa Patti (http://flowtv.org/?p=4999) A discussion of the restoration, for commercial ends, of the classical Brando as the dominant image of the once-fallen star in contemporary culture. "A Walter Ong Artifact Travels Through Media, Time, and Meaning" by Abigail Lambke (http://flowtv.org/?p=4993) Moving through oral and written, artifact and archive at the Walter J. Ong archive at Saint Louis University. "Infernal Archive: Medial States of Matter in the Netherlands Institue for Sound and Vision" by Shannon Mattern (http://flowtv.org/?p=4992) Examining the place of the archive at the Netherlands Institute for Sound and Vision "A Case for Imperfection: Confessions of a Digital Restoration Artist" by Pauline Stakelon (http://flowtv.org/?p=5000) A digital archivist grapples with the dilemma of handling technological artifacts evident in the kinescope recordings of The Goldbergs. "Beyond Netflix and TiVo: Rethinking HBO Through the Archive" by Shayne Pepper (http://flowtv.org/?p=4994) In order to properly study HBO, we need to visit the archive to make sense of its early original programming lineup. "The Views of the Feminist Archive" by Alexandra Juhasz (http://flowtv.org/?p=4996) The video collection from the Los Angeles Woman's Building offers a glimpse into a feminist archive in process. "What're Youse Lookin' at, Meathead?: Locating Archie Bunker Across Archives" by Kimberly Springer (http://flowtv.org/?p=4995) Kimberly Springer looks at how America?s ?most lovable bigot?, Archie Bunker, lives through the archives. "Catching and Crashing the Mediatheque" by Mel Hogan (http://flowtv.org/?p=4998) Mel Hogan investigates the politics of archiving video art. "Mechanisms for Non-Elite Voices: Mass-Observation and Twitter" by Pamela Ingleton (http://flowtv.org/?p=4997) A look at Twitter?s placement in the Library of Congress within historical perspective. 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 ---- For past messages, visit the Screen-L Archives: http://bama.ua.edu/archives/screen-l.html