scholarly journals Olivier ESTEVES et Sébastien LEFAIT (2014), La question raciale dans les séries américaines. The Wire, Homeland, Oz, The Sopranos, OITNB, Boss, Mad Men, Nip/Tuck / Mathieu de WASSEIGE (avec la collaboration de Barbara DUPONT) (2015), Séri

Communication ◽  
2016 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pierre Barrette
Keyword(s):  
Mad Men ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 27 (68) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jakob Isak Nielsen

Jakob Isak Nielsen: "Tv-serien som vor tids roman?"AbstractJakob Isak Nielsen: “The TV Series as the Novel of our Time?”In recent years contemporary TV series – particularly American one-hour drama series such as The Sopranos (HBO, 1999-2007), The Wire (HBO, 2002-2008) and Mad Men (AMC, 2007-) – have often been likened to many of the canonic works within the history of the novel. This article discusses the validity of this hypothesis byhighlighting a number of similarities between the two art forms before ultimately demonstrating how they differ from each other and how they are best understood as products of particular media-systemic circumstances.


2018 ◽  
Vol 25 (1) ◽  
pp. 27007
Author(s):  
Mayka Castellano ◽  
Melina Meimaridis
Keyword(s):  
Mad Men ◽  

Tendo em vista a expressiva quantidade de séries televisivas centradas em anti-heróis com destaque nas últimas décadas, tais como The Sopranos, Mad Men e Dexter, este artigo busca pensar a figura da anti-heroína. Para isso, apresentamos uma perspectiva histórica sobre a representação das mulheres nesse tipo de produção, destacando papéis recorrentes e suas implicações sociais. Para problematizar o contexto contemporâneo, quando personagens femininas mais complexas começam a aparecer, tomamos como objeto central da análise o drama UnREAL e partimos do pressuposto de que, embora apontem uma diversificação nas formas de representação da vivência feminina na ficção, as anti-heroínas são construídas através da aproximação ora com elementos tradicionalmente associados ao universo masculino, ora com habituais estereótipos de gênero.


Author(s):  
Gary Edgerton

Once or twice a decade, a new television program comes along to capture and express the zeitgeist. Mad Men (2007–2015) was that show in the late 2000s and early 2010s. Soon after premiering on the 19 July 2007 on AMC (formerly American Movie Classics from 1984 to 2003), Mad Men evolved from being that little program that nobody watched on an also-ran basic cable channel to the most celebrated scripted drama of its era. Mad Men set the creative standard for dramatic series over the span of its initial run. It was recognized by the Hollywood Foreign Press Association as the Best Television Drama of 2007, 2008, and 2009; the British Academy of Film and Television as Best International Show of 2009 and 2010; and the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences as the Outstanding Drama Series of 2008, 2009, 2010, and 2011, being the first basic cable series ever to win this award. Overall, Mad Men won five Golden Globes, sixteen Emmys, and fifty other major awards, including honors from all of the major Hollywood guilds, as well as receiving a prestigious George Foster Peabody Award for excellence in broadcasting. In retrospect, AMC executives adopted what they referred to as “the HBO formula” of developing their own edgy, sophisticated, passion project by a proven writer-producer, Matthew Weiner, who just happened to have a pedigree that included The Sopranos (HBO, 1999–2007). What resulted was the gradual emergence of Mad Men as AMC’s first original hit series, generating unprecedented word-of-mouth, and rebranding the channel as a hipper, more discriminating, alternative cable-and-satellite network. In turn, Mad Men broke the glass ceiling for basic cable in much the same way that The Sopranos had done for pay TV some eight-and-a-half years earlier. Mad Men also benefited greatly from the emergence of multiplatform reception. Even though Mad Men’s impact on AMC was immediate and transformative, the show was at first more a cultural phenomenon than a breakout hit. Nevertheless, its first-season audience average of 900,000 on AMC in 2007 eventually grew to 2.5 million by Season 6. Moreover, Mad Men’s total viewership relied heavily on syndication, DVDs, and streaming to digital devices, translating into an estimated 30 million unduplicated viewers per episode in North America alone. By the time of its finale on 17 May 2015, Mad Men was being syndicated in over fifty countries and was available 24/7 through online streaming globally.


Author(s):  
Liz Maynes-Aminzade
Keyword(s):  

“Dickensian” has become a buzzword in recent TV criticism not only because the term connotes a large character ensemble, but also because it connotes adiffuseensemble. In TV series such asThe Sopranos, The Wire,andBreaking Bad, many characters live and work so far apart from each other—whether in different neighborhoods of a city or different regions of the globe—that they fail to recognize how their actions affect each other. Through its wide spatial scope, this type of macroscopic “stranger narrative” explores a type of ethical confusion that is a byproduct of globalization. Namely, these narratives reveal to readers or viewers how they might be connected to and responsible for people they don’t even know.


Author(s):  
Melanie Bourdaa

This article deals with the way HBO promotes its shows today using strategies of ‘transmedia storytelling’ (Jenkins 2006). The US pay-per view cable channel has a history of creating a specific promotional system around its programs. Its famous slogan ‘It’s Not TV. It’s HBO.’ accompanied the introduction of narrative complexity in shows like The Sopranos (HBO/Brillstein Entertainment Partner, 1999-2007) or The Wire (HBO/Blown Deadline Productions, 2002-8) for example. Transmedia Storytelling, as theorized by Henry Jenkins, is a way to extend stories across multiple media platforms in order to create a coherent storyworld, giving information on characters or insights on the plots and the narrative universe. This article analyses how HBO is developing strategies of transmedia storytelling. I will focus on two specific television shows, True Blood (HBO/Your Face Goes Here Entertainment, 2008- ) and Game of Thrones (HBO/Television 360/Grok! Television/Generator Entertainment/Bighead Littlehead, 2011- ), in order to understand how HBO managed to promote these shows and expand its brand in the American and international television landscape. I use a dual methodology, first presenting an analysis of the transmedia strategies related to the universes of the shows. Then I will draw on interviews with the creators of these strategies in order to understand how they are included in the promotion of HBO.


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