Book Review – Production Management for Television

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Production Management for Television (2009). Mitchell, Leslie. London: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group. pp. 115.

Journalism and communication education focus on developing student’s skills and practices, but there is a gap between classroom teaching and media operations. Leslie Mitchell, a senior teaching fellow at Stirling University and author of Freelancing for Television and Radio (2005), utilizes his vast professional experience to blend basic theories with practices and ethics.  [Read more...]

Book Review – America’s First Network TV Censor

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America’s First Network TV Censor (2010). Pondillo, Robert. Carbondale, IL: Southern Illinois University Press. pp. 254.

Federal Communications Commission regulation of sexual and other content has been limited, confusing, and often without resolution. Against this backdrop, one may argue that self-regulation within broadcast organizations is worthy of careful examination. Robert Pondillo is an associate professor of electronic media communication at Middle Tennessee State University. As a film writer and director, he recognized the value of analyzing the papers of Stockton Helffrich, NBC’s first manager of censorship. Pondillo utilized the papers, interviews, and other primary sources to paint a picture of how early censorship developed within one organizational context.  He has interpreted this through a cultural and historical lens and argues that this period influenced future media.  [Read more...]

Book Review – Cultural Diversity and Global Media: The Mediation of Difference

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Cultural Diversity and Global Media: The Mediation of Difference (2010). Siapera, Eugenia Ames, Iowa: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 222.

A thorough, complete introduction to the major theorists and theories on the complex relationship between mass media and multiculturalism couldn’t be more timely—and Eugenia Siapera provides such a textbook. This is an authoritative reference tool that posits global media as an institutional practice of representation, then sets out to explore key debates and approaches to understanding how they participate in the production and circulation of meaning. “Representation is found at the heart of mediation,” writes Siapera, so “without representation neither production nor consumption would have any meaning” (p. 111). By examining processes of media production, representation, and consumption as they engage with cultural diversity, she explains that “cultural diversity in this particular historical juncture must be seen as mediated, that is, traversing processes of the production, circulation, representation and reception/consumption of meaning that characterize late modern, technologically evolved societies” (p. 75).  [Read more...]

Book Review – Audience Evolution: New Technologies and the Transformation of Media Audiences

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Audience Evolution: New Technologies and the Transformation of Media AudiencesNapoli, Philip M. (2011). New York: Columbia University Press. pp. 240.

Philip M. Napoli provides a critical cultural examination of the evolution of the concept of audience, beginning with its twentieth-century definition by media theorists and media practitioners. Persons within media industries, academia, and the consumer have redefined the conceptualization of audience, given the onset of the Internet in the twenty-first century. Napoli’s ideas help to shed light on the conceptualization of “audience” for the future. Scholars of journalism, mass communication, and cultural studies (as well as business) will find useful information in Napoli’s book, which provides new entrees into understanding how socially constructed definitions of audience are changing.  [Read more...]

Book Review – The Media Economy

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The Media EconomyAlbarran, Alan B. (2010). New York: Routledge. pp. 201.

With everyone looking for the business model that puts the economy back in media economy, books with that title raise great hope. The difficulty in writing a book about the media economy is that the ecosystem is so fluid that any attempt to describe it is in danger of becoming a history and not a model for the future.  [Read more...]

Book Review – The Magazine Century: American Magazines Since 1900

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The Magazine Century: American Magazines Since 1900Sumner, David E. (2010). New York, NY: Peter Lang Publishing. pp. 242.

David E. Sumner, a journalism professor at Ball State University, tells us that the magazine industry is weathering the storm that newspapers seem to be facing in the first decade of the twenty-first century. He concludes that the magazine readers’ relationship with the publications of their choice is “a unique tactile, visual and sensory experience” (p. 209).

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