944 resultados para Parliamentary TV
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All the whiz-bang gadgets of television have struggled to turn on the lightbulb of creativity.
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This article content analyzes music in tourism TV commercials from 95 regions and countries to identify their general acoustic characteristics. The objective is to offer a general guideline in the postproduction of tourism TV commercials. It is found that tourism TV commercials tend to be produced in a faster tempo with beats per minute close to 120, which is rare to be found in general TV commercials. To compensate for the faster tempo (increased aural information load), less scenes (longer duration per scene) were edited into the footage. Production recommendations and future research are presented.
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Television drama used to be the poor relation of the full length feature film made for cinema. No self-respecting movie star would be seen dead in the former, and successful TV actors rarely sustained careers of comparable brilliance in the film industry. Those days are gone, if a series such as House of Cards is any indicator of the trends.
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This article uses the example of the mediatisation of Season 2 of the Australian documentary-cum-reality TV series Go Back to Where You Came From, and the associated #GoBackSBS Twitter feed, to investigate how public opinions are shaped, reshaped and expressed in new hybrid media ecologies. We explore how social media tools like Twitter can support the efforts of a TV production; provide spaces through which the public can engage ad hoc with a public event, be informed, shape their opinions and share them with others; and thus open up new possibilities for public discourse to occur. We suggest that new online public sphericules are emerging that provide spaces within which publics can engage with the cultural social and political realities with which they are confronted. In this way, we highlight the importance of mundane communication to the shaping and constant reshaping of public opinion.
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The arrival of subscription video on demand services Netflix, Stan and Presto have implications for what we call "television" in Australia – and much of the policy detail remains to be hammered out.
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Telephone and web-based technologies such as SMS, smartphone apps, gamification, online/mobile games, online quizzes and tools can be used in personal health interventions in two ways: health promotion or social marketing. In response to the Queensland government's call for submissions to the parliamentary inquiry, a social marketing and design submission from four of the faculties at Queensland University of Technology was submitted. There appears to be a great deal of confusion in government circles about the terms ‘social marketing’ and ‘health promotion’ and often they are used interchangeably when they are actually significantly different approaches. Social marketing is the science and practice of behaviour change and involves goods and services that offer a value proposition, and which incentivises citizens to change their behaviour voluntarily. However, social marketing is often mistakenly used to describe advertising and communication or social media marketing. This submission contains an overview of how technology interventions need to be implemented to be successful, provides examples of the evidence that telephone and web-based interventions can effectively influence public health outcome. This submission poses seven critical factors.
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NBC's failed attempt to remake the BBC's Coupling generated a significant amount of press coverage in summer 2003. At the core of the debate was a struggle to reconcile an increasingly integrated transatlantic television market with traditional assumptions about culture and its authentic connection to space and place. The interest in the remake not only created a space where certain national differences were played out and performed but also facilitated an equally compelling transatlantic dialogue about creative ownership, appropriation, and a network's responsibility to its audiences. In doing so, the media attention highlighted how television formats are best understood not as innocuous commodities of international trade but as potential sites of articulation, contestation, and community in an increasingly transnational television environment.
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This week, Telstra announced it will shortly introduce a new streaming video set top box. For a number of reasons, this is a very smart move.
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In his 1987 book, The Media Lab: Inventing the Future at MIT, Stewart Brand provides an insight into the visions of the future of the media in the 1970s and 1980s. 1 He notes that Nicolas Negroponte made a compelling case for the foundation of a media laboratory at MIT with diagrams detailing the convergence of three sectors of the media—the broadcast and motion picture industry; the print and publishing industry; and the computer industry. Stewart Brand commented: ‘If Negroponte was right and communications technologies really are converging, you would look for signs that technological homogenisation was dissolving old boundaries out of existence, and you would expect an explosion of new media where those boundaries used to be’. Two decades later, technology developers, media analysts and lawyers have become excited about the latest phase of media convergence. In 2006, the faddish Time Magazine heralded the arrival of various Web 2.0 social networking services: You can learn more about how Americans live just by looking at the backgrounds of YouTube videos—those rumpled bedrooms and toy‐strewn basement rec rooms—than you could from 1,000 hours of network television. And we didn’t just watch, we also worked. Like crazy. We made Facebook profiles and Second Life avatars and reviewed books at Amazon and recorded podcasts. We blogged about our candidates losing and wrote songs about getting dumped. We camcordered bombing runs and built open‐source software. America loves its solitary geniuses—its Einsteins, its Edisons, its Jobses—but those lonely dreamers may have to learn to play with others. Car companies are running open design contests. Reuters is carrying blog postings alongside its regular news feed. Microsoft is working overtime to fend off user‐created Linux. We’re looking at an explosion of productivity and innovation, and it’s just getting started, as millions of minds that would otherwise have drowned in obscurity get backhauled into the global intellectual economy. The magazine announced that Time’s Person of the Year was ‘You’, the everyman and everywoman consumer ‘for seizing the reins of the global media, for founding and framing the new digital democracy, for working for nothing and beating the pros at their own game’. This review essay considers three recent books, which have explored the legal dimensions of new media. In contrast to the unbridled exuberance of Time Magazine, this series of legal works displays an anxious trepidation about the legal ramifications associated with the rise of social networking services. In his tour de force, The Future of Reputation: Gossip, Rumor, and Privacy on the Internet, Daniel Solove considers the implications of social networking services, such as Facebook and YouTube, for the legal protection of reputation under privacy law and defamation law. Andrew Kenyon’s edited collection, TV Futures: Digital Television Policy in Australia, explores the intersection between media law and copyright law in the regulation of digital television and Internet videos. In The Future of the Internet and How to Stop It, Jonathan Zittrain explores the impact of ‘generative’ technologies and ‘tethered applications’—considering everything from the Apple Mac and the iPhone to the One Laptop per Child programme.
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More than 14 million Dish Network subscribers have been without Breaking Bad, Mad Men, and The Walking Dead since June when the satellite provider pulled AMC Networks—AMC, Sundance, IFC, and WE tv—from its lineup in a dispute over carriage fees. The tactic is called a blackout, and it’s becoming increasingly common in the television landscape as pay-TV operators and station owners battle over the nearly $5 billion at stake in the next 5 years.
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Digital media have contributed to significant disruptions in the business of audience measurement. Television broadcasters have long relied on simple and authoritative measures of who is watching what. The demand for ratings data, as a common currency in transactions involving advertising and program content, will likely remain, but accompanying measurements of audience engagement with media content would also be of value. Today's media environment increasingly includes social media and second-screen use, providing a data trail that affords an opportunity to measure engagement. If the limitations of using social media to indicate audience engagement can be overcome, social media use may allow for quantitative and qualitative measures of engagement. Raw social media data must be contextualized, and it is suggested that tools used by sports analysts be incorporated to do so. Inspired by baseball's Sabremetrics, the authors propose Telemetrics in an attempt to separate actual performance from contextual factors. Telemetrics facilitates measuring audience activity in a manner controlling for factors such as time slot, network, and so forth. It potentially allows both descriptive and predictive measures of engagement.
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The objective of my dissertation Pull (or Draught, or Moves) at the Parnassus , is to provide a deeper understanding of Nordic Middle Class radicalism of the 1960 s as featured in Finland-Swedish literature. My approach is cultural materialist in a broad sense; social class is regarded a crucial aspect of the contents and contexts of the novels and literary discussions explored. In the first volume, Middle Class With A Human Face , novels by Christer Kihlman, Jarl Sjöblom, Marianne Alopaeus, and Ulla-Lena Lundberg, respectively, are read from the points of view of place, emotion, and power. The term "cryptotope" is used to designate the hidden places found to play an important role in all of these four narratives. Also, the "chronotope of the provincial small town", described by Mikhail Bakhtin in 1938, is exemplified in Kihlman s satirical novel, as is the chronotope of of war (Algeria, Vietnam) in those of Alopaeus and Lundberg s. All the four novels signal changes in the way general "scripts of emotions", e.g. jealousy, are handled and described. The power relations in the novels are also read, with reference to Michel Foucault. As the protagonists in two of them work as journalists, a critical discussion about media and Bourgeois hegemony is found; the term "repressive legitimation" is created to grasp these patterns of manipulation. The Modernist Debate , part II of the study, concerns a literary discussion between mainly Finland-Swedish authors and critics. Essayist Johannes Salminen (40) provided much of the fuel for the debate in 1963, questioning the relevance to contemporary life of the Finland-Swedish modernist tradition of the 1910 s and 1920 s. In 1965, a group of younger authors and critics, including poet Claes Andersson (28), followed up this critique in a debate taking place mainly in the newspaper Vasabladet. Poets Rabbe Enckell (62), Bo Carpelan (39) and others defended a timeless poetry. This debate is contextualized and the changing literary field is analyzed using concepts provided by sociologist Pierre Bourdieu. In the thesis, the historical moment of Middle Class radicalism with a human face is regarded a temporary luxury that new social groups could afford themselves, as long as they were knocking over the statues and symbols of the Old Bourgeoisie. This is not to say that all components of the Sixties strategy have lost their power. Some of them have survived and even grown, others remain latent in the gene bank of utopias, waiting for new moments of change.
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Despite its rising success, interactive TV (iTV) has found very little attention in the field of HCI. Therefore, the aim of this paper is to investigate the usability of iTV services. It presents the results of a usability test and discusses the implications for further developments. The results show, that prior knowledge of Internet and mobile phones supports the usability of iTV services regarding navigation and text input, while the lack of it leads to great difficulties. Difficult tasks, such as writing a text message, had a success rate of only 20%, while guided tours proofed to be more usable with a success rate of 70%.
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Yleisradion jouluaamuna lähettämä TV-jumalanpalvelus kerää vuosittain enemmän katsojia kuin kaikissa Suomen kirkoissa yhteensä käy ihmisiä samana aamuna. TV:n joulusaarnalla onkin merkitystä siihen, miten ihmiset mieltävät kirkon sanoman joulusta. Tämän tutkimuksen tarkoituksena oli tarkastella TV-jumalanpalveluksen joulusaarnan muutosta vuosien 1985 ja 2009 välisenä aikana sekä toteutuksen että sisällön näkökulmasta. Pääasiallisena tutkimuskohteena oli sisällön muutos (1) kirkollisen sanoman, (2) jouluperinteen ja -tunnelman sekä (3) perheyhteisön kuvausten suhteen. Teemat valittiin aiempien saarnatutkimusten sekä kolmen joulusaarnan alustavan analyysin perusteella. Tutkimusaineiston muodostivat kaikki Kirkon tiedotuskeskuksen arkistosta löytyneet joulusaarnat, joissa oli sekä kuva että ääni. Aineisto koostui 20 saarnasta, jotka litteroitiin ja analysoitiin. Lisäksi nauhoitettiin kaksi taustahaastattelua. Tutkimusmetodina käytettiin kvalitatiivista metodia, teoriaohjaavaa sisällönanalyysiä, jonka tulokset luokiteltiin ja kvantifioitiin. Sisällönanalyysin tuloksia havainnollistettiin taulukoiden ja graafisten kuvioiden avulla. Muutoksen havaitsemisen apuna käytettiin summamuuttujia neljän tarkastelujakson osalta, vuosilta 1985-1991, 1992-1996, 2000-2004 ja 2005-2009. Saarnojen toteutuksen suhteen todettiin, että joulusaarnat lyhentyivät hieman tutkimusjakson aikana. Saarnan kuvitus muuttui vuodesta 2003 lähtien niukemmaksi, jotta katsojat voisivat keskittyä paremmin saarnan sisältöön. Saarnaajien oheisviestintä oli vähäistä, ja useimmiten saarnaajilla oli vain yksi ilme ja erittäin vähän eleitä. Kertomusten käyttö lisääntyi saarnoissa selvästi, ja vuosina 2005-2009 sekä jouluevankeliumia että muita raamatunkohtia havainnollistettiin kertomusten avulla aiempaa enemmän. Yleisin saarnoissa lainattu raamatunkohta oli enkelien julistus ”Teille on syntynyt Vapahtaja” . Jeesukseen viittaavat nimitykset muuttuivat tutkimusjakson aikana mielenkiintoisella tavalla. Nimike Jeesus oli yleisin nimike vuodesta 1985 vuoteen 2004. Sen jälkeen yleisimmäksi nimikkeeksi nousi lapsi, ja joulusaarnoissa käytettiin runsaasti myös muita yleiskieleen kuuluvia nimikkeitä, jotka tiivistettiin muotoon avuton lapsi/vastasyntynyt. Perinteisiä kristillisiä nimikkeitä, kuten Herra, Kristus ja seimen lapsi, ei käytetty vuosina 2005-2009 lainkaan. Tämä herätti kysymyksen siitä, onko joulun sanoma maallistunut. Oletus ei saanut tukea kirkolliseen sanomaan liittyvien teemojen tarkastelusta. Vaikka syyllisyyden kuvaukset vähentyivät, rakkauden merkitys korostui tutkimusjakson loppua kohden, ja myös elämän tarkoitukseen liittyvät asiat mainittiin 2000-luvulla useammin kuin aiemmin. Erityisesti inkarnaation Jumalan ihmiseksi tulemisen kuvaukset lisääntyivät, joten joulun kirkollinen ydinsanoma oli entistä selkeämmin esillä. Jouluperinteen kuvausten suhteen ei havaittu muutosta vuosikymmenten aikana. Tunnelmaa kuvattiin tutkimusjakson alussa rauhan ja ihmeen käsittein, mutta lopussa valo korostui. Perheyhteisön kuvaukset olivat hyvin esillä, sillä lapset mainittiin joka toisessa ja perhe joka kolmannessa saarnassa. Lapset mainittiin vuosikymmenten kuluessa entistä useammin, ja myös yksinäisyyden kuvaukset lisääntyivät. Seurakunta mainittiin joulusaarnoissa hyvin harvoin, mikä sai pohtimaan seurakunnan roolia yhteisöllisyyden kannalta. Tutkimuksen johtopäätöksenä todettiin, että suomalaisen nyky-yhteiskunnan maallistumiskehitys ei näy TV:n joulusaarnoissa 1985-2009.