
Date of pre-conference: 2 October 2020 Call for papers deadline: 15 May 2020 Notificiation: 1 June 2020 Organisers : João Carlos Correia, University of Beira Interior (jcorreia@ubi.pt) Pedro Jerónimo, University of Beira Interior

Date of pre-conference: 2 October 2020 Call for papers deadline: 15 May 2020 Notificiation: 1 June 2020 Organisers : João Carlos Correia, University of Beira Interior (jcorreia@ubi.pt) Pedro Jerónimo, University of Beira Interior

Edited by Stuart Price and Ben Harbisher Media Discourse Centre , De Montfort University, UK Deadline – 20th May 2020 : Send Name, Title, Affiliation, followed by a 300-word Abstract (as an attachment and in the main body of the email) including focus, approach/method and academic references.

You find yourself amidst the worst public health crisis for a generation. The muddled thinking at the heart of government is not engendering confidence. The spectre of mass deaths and possible chaos in an under-funded health service hangs over ministerial indecision. Politics has become laughable. Comedy has become political. Great satire troubles the comfortable and consoles the afflicted.

The Covid-19 lockdown means that there’s a lot more TV viewing going on. Those TV scholars who are obsessed with Netflix and binge-watching will be missing the resurgence of broadcast TV. In Easter week, 6-12 April, “viewing to BARB measured TV grew by 23% in all time, 34% in daytime and 12% in 7pm-10.30pm peak, compared with the same, non-Easter week in 2019” according to Broadcast magazine.

The television scholar Alan McKee once asked the rhetorical question ‘is Doctor Who Australian?’, a question he immediately pondered may be a stupid one as everything about the program (cast, writers, place of production, as well as many themes) were so emphatically British. The question though, is a perfectly sensible one, and was meant in terms of audience, reception, and impact.

** ** WARNING: Never get engaged in e-mails about the Leeds-Harvard referencing system while you’re listening to a new four CD soundtrack from Fanderson. It just leads to Bad Stuff like this… Look, there’s something really good I want to tell you, but I don’t quite know how I need to express it in an academic manner.

Issue editors: Gwénaëlle Le Gras (Bordeaux Montaigne) and Jules Sandeau (Paul Valéry Montpellier 3) inquiries: gwenlegras@wanadoo.fr and sandeau.jules@gmail.com The open-access and peer-reviewed online French journal Genre en séries: cinéma, télévision, médias is devoted to the study of gender representations in film, television and other visual media.

Discussions of race have been central to television studies in the United States for decades.

While Danish schools have been closed since mid-March and all family members are staying at home in the evenings, new kinds of programming, such as live sing-along broadcasts, are suddenly finding popularity as primetime family content By Eva Novrup Redvall, PI of the research project Reaching Young Audiences

Seeing the request to let us know what we are watching during the REMAIN INDOORS 2020 marathon actually got me stumped. What are we watching? What does that mean? Are we in thrall to any particular series? Can we not wait for the next episode (or just hit the ‘x’ button on the ps4 controller)? And the actual answers are, or at least until two days ago were, nothing much and, uh, no. I think a little context here might help.

Now, those of you who misspent their respective youths as badly as I did will no doubt have immediately spotted the origin of the title of my first blog of 2020 in which I singularly failed to prove that I can make an argument: Is This The Right Room For An Argument? That’s right. It originates in a well-known sketch from Monty Python’s Flying Circus (strictly speaking 1969-1973)… Five points for getting that.