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We Now Disrupt This Broadcast

How Cable Transformed Television and the Internet Revolutionized It All

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
The collision of new technologies, changing business strategies, and innovative storytelling that produced a new golden age of TV.

Cable television channels were once the backwater of American television, programming recent and not-so-recent movies and reruns of network shows. Then came La Femme Nikita, OZ, The Sopranos, Mad Men, Game of Thrones, and The Walking Dead. And then, just as “prestige cable” became a category, came House of Cards and Netflix, Hulu, Amazon Video, and other Internet distributors of television content. What happened? In We Now Disrupt This Broadcast, Amanda Lotz chronicles the collision of new technologies, changing business strategies, and innovative storytelling that produced an era termed “peak TV.”

Lotz explains that changes in the business of television expanded the creative possibilities of television. She describes the costly infrastructure rebuilding undertaken by cable service providers in the late 1990s and the struggles of cable channels to produce (and pay for) original, scripted programming in order to stand out from the competition. These new programs defied television conventions and made viewers adjust their expectations of what television could be. Le Femme Nikita offered cable's first antihero, Mad Men cost more than advertisers paid, The Walking Dead became the first mass cable hit, and Game of Thrones was the first global television blockbuster. Internet streaming didn't kill cable, Lotz tells us. Rather, it revolutionized how we watch television. Cable and network television quickly established their own streaming portals. Meanwhile, cable service providers had quietly transformed themselves into Internet providers, able to profit from both prestige cable and streaming services. Far from being dead, television continues to transform.

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    • Library Journal

      April 15, 2018

      How we watch and understand TV has changed dramatically over the past 20 years. Not too long ago, viewers chose programs from a fixed schedule offered by a few broadcast networks to watch on a dedicated device: the television set. Lotz (media studies, Univ. of Michigan) documents the transformation of the TV industry from this controlled environment to the current mode of selecting from programs produced by numerous cable and Internet companies to be watched on a wide range of devices at any time. The author traces the first disruption to the introduction of cable, initially as a mode of delivery and then as producers of programming. Cable channels introduced innovative programs such as Mad Men and Game of Thrones, challenging conventions. She then examines how streaming portals revolutionized the way viewers watched programs by freeing them from a schedule, claiming that through these changes, legacy media and established companies continue to exist and thrive. Although Lotz calls these shifts revolutionary, she argues that the transformation is slow and measured. VERDICT For media scholars and readers interested in new technologies.--Judy Solberg, Sacramento, CA

      Copyright 2018 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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  • English

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