The Broadcast Radio Era

Author(s):  
Michele Hilmes
Keyword(s):  
Adaptation ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
pp. 149-164 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jonathan Bignell

AbstractThis article focuses on how histories of television construct narratives about what the medium is, how it changes, and how it works in relation to other media. The key examples discussed are dramatic adaptations made and screened in Britain. They include early forms of live transmission of performance shot with multiple cameras, usually in a TV studio, with the aim of bringing an intimate and immediate experience to the viewer. This form shares aspects of medial identity with broadcast radio and live television programmes, and with theatre. The article also analyses adaptations of a later period, mainly filmed dramas for television that were broadcast in weekly serialized episodes, and shot on location to offer viewers a rich engagement with a realized fictional world. Here, film production techniques and technologies are adapted for television, alongside the routines of daily and weekly scheduling that characterize television broadcasting. The article identifies and analyses the questions about what is proper to television that arise from the different forms that adaptations took. The analyses show that television has been a mixed form across its history, while often aiming to reject such intermediality and claim its own specificity as a medium. Television adaptation has, paradoxically, operated as the ground to assert and debate what television could and should be, through a process of transforming pre-existing material. The performance of television’s role has taken place through the relay, repetition, and remediation that adaptation implies, and also through the repudiation of adaptation.


Author(s):  
G.D. Cook ◽  
J.D. Christie ◽  
P.R. Clarkson ◽  
M.M. Hochberg ◽  
B.T. Logan ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
María Pilar Fernández-Gallego ◽  
Álvaro Mesa-Castellanos ◽  
Alicia Lozano-Díez ◽  
Doroteo T. Toledano

2020 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 38-45
Author(s):  
Madelaine Ware

The types of political parties in Canada have drastically changed over the last 150 years, and so too has the dominant forms of media. My research explores the role the media has played in the evolution of the Canadian party system, and attempts to answer the question: How has media contributed to the changes in the party system over time, and how has it facilitated a shift between the types of parties? The federal system has seen elite parties, mass parties and brokerage parties, and the market-oriented party, and my research examines how the media has influenced the way parties communicate their platform and policies with the electorate. As well, I explore the dominant types and modes of media present in each type of party system: from newspapers, to the introduction of broadcast radio, to television, to the recent phenomena of social media. Media influence is the most significant factor in the evolution of the Canadian party system, as it is the primary vehicle for the delivery of information to Canadian citizens. 


2019 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 209-228
Author(s):  
Sylvia Chan-Olmsted ◽  
Rang Wang ◽  
Kyung-Ho Hwang

Digital technologies have redefined how people use audio media, especially for the millennial audience segment. Faced with the challenge from streaming music, many broadcast radio stations have launched their own mobile apps to compete with the new audio services such as Spotify. Guided by the uses and gratifications conceptual framework, this study employed a national survey to investigate millennials’ perceptions of the substitutability and complementarity of broadcast radio, its apps, and music streaming services. The results showed that while radio listeners perceived broadcast radio and its apps as similar products, they regarded music streaming services as distinct from the two. In addition, this study examined motivators behind the diverse perceptions and identified information, escapism, entertainment, and socialization as important. The results suggest that radio stations should take advantage of the mobile technology and offer unique values through their apps, rather than duplicate the offline consumption experience.


Author(s):  
Masahiro Yoneji ◽  
Toshiaki Takano ◽  
Hiroyuki Nakata ◽  
Shin Shimakura
Keyword(s):  

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