Download e-book for iPad: Something Completely Different: British Television and by Jeffrey S. Miller

By Jeffrey S. Miller

ISBN-10: 0816632405

ISBN-13: 9780816632404

ISBN-10: 0816689725

ISBN-13: 9780816689729

Among Emma Peel and tire Ministry of foolish Walks British tv had an important effect on American pop culture within the Sixties and Nineteen Seventies. In anything totally different, Jeffrey Miller bargains the 1st accomplished research of British programming on American tv, discussing why the yankee networks imported such sequence because the Avengers and Monty Python's Flying Circus; how American audiences got those uniquely British exhibits; and the way the exhibits' luck reshaped American television.

Miller's vigorous research covers 3 genres: undercover agent indicates, dress dramas, and caricature comedies. as well as his shut readings of the sequence themselves, Miller considers the networks' packaging of the courses for American audience and the impacts that ended in their recognition, together with the yankee tv industry's look for new advertisements profit and the production of PBS.

Show description

Read or Download Something Completely Different: British Television and American Culture PDF

Similar communication & media studies books

Download e-book for kindle: Mass Communication Theory: Foundations, Ferment, and Future, by Stanley J. Baran, Dennis K. Davis

MASS communique thought: FOUNDATIONS, FERMENT, AND destiny, 6th variation, introduces you to present and classical mass communique theories and explains the media literacy stream in phrases you could comprehend. Plus, this mass conversation textbook is helping you improve a greater realizing of media concept so that you can play a task within the media industry's destiny.

Parody and Taste in Postwar American Television Culture by Ethan Thompson PDF

During this unique research, Thompson explores the complex relationships among americans and tv in the course of the Nineteen Fifties, as noticeable and effected via well known humor. Parody and style in Postwar American tv tradition records how american citizens grew acquainted with knowing politics, present occasions, and pop culture via comedy that's concurrently serious, advertisement, and humorous.

New PDF release: From Theory to Practice: How to Assess and Apply

From idea to perform is the 1st scholarly examine the probabilities and demanding situations of neutral and goal journalism in our digitized media international. This quantity brings jointly contributions from editors at most suitable information retailers like Reuters and the BBC to debate how one can verify, degree, and practice impartiality in information and present affairs in a global the place the impression of electronic applied sciences is consistently altering how information is roofed, provided, and bought.

Additional resources for Something Completely Different: British Television and American Culture

Sample text

Instead, Bennett and Woollacott argue, the best way to understand the relationship between texts and their audiences is through what they call "reading formations": By reading formations here, we have in mind... those specific determinations which bear in upon, mold and configure the relations between texts and readers in determinant conditions of reading. It refers, specifically, to the inter-textual relations which prevail in a specific context, thereby activating a given body of texts by ordering the relations between them in a specific way such that their reading is alwaysalready cued in specific directions...

His programs The Baron (ABC, 1966), Court-Martial (ABC, 1966), Man in a Suitcase (ABC, 1968), and The Champions (NBC, 1968) each offered a new take on the international agent working for the forces of good. Rather than the British protagonists and foreign settings used in his early programs, however, Grade cast American actors as the leads in all of these series and added American locations to The Baron, a World War II setting to CourtMartial, and a superhero device to The Champions to make even more obvious appeals to American audiences.

And as the prices of commodities varied in a free market according to supply and demand, so the prices of audiences began to vary in "free" television, with highly rated shows commanding higher advertising rates. With this grand commodification of television, however, came an increasing understanding that as various groups of consumers would choose products based upon the needs or desires of that group, so might advertisers choose audiences based upon their own needs and desires for sales. 43 Into all these changes floated the figure of James Bond.

Download PDF sample

Something Completely Different: British Television and American Culture by Jeffrey S. Miller


by Steven
4.3

Rated 4.57 of 5 – based on 47 votes