The journal is proud to announce the publication of issue 26.06! This
month's articles:


Deborah L. Jaramillo, "Aging into TV News"
<http://www.flowjournal.org/2020/04/aging-into-tv-news/>

Deborah L. Jaramillo examines cable news demographics and how, contrary to
popular assumptions, MSNBC and Fox News both vie for certain age groups,
with varying levels of success.


Brian Fauteux, "Manufacturing Consent in the Digital Music Industries"
<http://www.flowjournal.org/2020/04/manufacturing-consent-digital-music/>

In his second column, Brian Fauteux, drawing on insights from The Cultural
Capital Project, examines the ways digital music industry executives have
dominated the narrative of streaming music and argues for more voices from
the creative laborers who produce content for the streaming music giants.


Helen Morgan-Parmett, "At the Scene of the Crime: Podcasting and
Placemaking"
<https://www.flowjournal.org/2020/04/at-the-scene-of-the-crime/>

Helen Morgan-Parmett explores the ways in which podcasting's sensorial,
intimate, and convergent capabilities produce new connections to space and
place.


Finley Freibert, "Gay Democratic Socialist Disruption on Television in 1971"
<https://www.flowjournal.org/2020/04/gay-democratic-socialist-disruption-tv/>

Finley Freibert intervenes with traditional interpolations of gay activism
in the 1960s and 1970s to investigate media activism performed in the name
of gay and democratic socialist liberation.



Kathleen Loock, "'Forever Young': Digital De-Aging, Memory, and Nostalgia"
<http://www.flowjournal.org/2020/04/forever-young-digital-deaging/>

Kathleen Loock explores the increasing use of digital de-aging in Hollywood
cinema and how the phenomenon affects stars' personas and audience memory
and nostalgia.


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*Flow* <http://flowjournal.org> is a critical forum on television and media
culture published by the Department of Radio-Television-Film
<https://rtf.utexas.edu> at the University of Texas at Austin. *Flow*'s
mission is to provide a space where scholars and the public can discuss
media histories, media studies, and the changing landscape of contemporary
media.

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